Idle animation

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Idle animations are animations within video games that occur when the player character is not performing any actions.[1] They serve to give games personality, as an Easter Egg for the player, or for realism.

History

One of the earliest games to feature an idle animation was Android Nim in 1978. The androids blink, look around, and seemingly talk to one another until the player gives an order.[2] Another two early examples are Maziacs and The Pharaoh's Curse released in 1983. Idle animations grew in usage throughout the 16 bit era.[3] Incorporating idle animations was done to give personality towards games and their characters [4] as they are the only in-game actions aside from cutscenes where the characters are free to act independent of the player's input. [5] The idle animation length and details can depend on interaction between the player and character, such as third person player idle animations are longer to avoid looking robotic on repeated viewing.  In modern 3D games idle animation are done to give realism. For games targeting towards younger audiences the idle animations are more likely to be complex or humorous. In comparison games targeted towards older audiences tend to include more basic idle animations.

Examples

References

  1. Totten, Chris (2012) (in English). Game Character Creation with Blender and Unity. Indianapolis Sybex. pp. Chapter 8: Creating an Idle Animation. ISBN 978-1118172728. 
  2. Reed, Matthew (2022). "Android Nim". http://www.trs-80.org/android-nim/. 
  3. Davis, Ashley (July 27, 2009). "'Splosion Man and the lost art of the idle animation". https://www.destructoid.com/splosion-man-and-the-lost-art-of-the-idle-animation/. 
  4. (in English) NEXT Generation 31. Next Generation. 1997. pp. 48. https://archive.org/details/NEXT_Generation_31/page/n45/mode/2up. 
  5. Alexandra, Heather (May 6, 2019). "The Quiet Importance of Idle Animations". https://kotaku.com/the-quiet-importance-of-idle-animations-1834564079. 

External links