Forum Discussion

EnglishPastaCak's avatar
12 years ago

Battlefield 4 3D Tri-Def *NOT SOLVED*

Hello, I'm wondering what the official word is on using extensions such as Tri-Def to simulate 3D vision?
I've got an Oculus Rift developer kit and I'm curious to see Battlefield 4 running in it but with no official 3D support from DICE, third party extensions such as Tr-Def and Perception seem to be the only route to acheiving this, only problem is I'm not sure whether this would result in a ban or not.

Ignore the "Solved" message, this is not solved.

6 Replies

  • Anonymous's avatar
    Anonymous
    12 years ago

    I am sorry but we can only say that we are not responsible for any tools which are altering the gameplay, including visuals, of the game. As there are several tools strictly forbidden, using this tool is at your own risk and could cause an account ban.


    Cheers

    Basti

  • That doesn't answer my question and I would appreciate it if you didn't mark this as solved because it solves nothing.
    Rendering video feed into a 3D display does not affect the gameplay at all, nor does it alter any balance of the visual, it simply renders the image twice to create a 3D effect.
    So I ask again, what does EA or DICE have to say about the usage of tools to emulate stereoscopic display?

  • Tooshjr's avatar
    Tooshjr
    12 years ago

    To be fair man, that does look solved to me. Just enjoy the game for what it is..

  • I want to know for certain whether EA or DICE will ban my account for playing the game which enables 3D vision, it's not that difficult a question to answer.
    Back in Battlefield 3, there was a community made patch which disabled colour grading which at first DICE/EA claimed was hacking, then they announced a console command which would enable it and then you said they were revoking that idea and would ban anyone who was found to use said patch.

    As it stands, Battlefield 4 is riddled with that many glitches that DICE has announced they're shelving future projects to get the game working in order, I may as well make the best of the experience whilst I can in campaign until DICE fixes the bugs in multiplayer.
    EA may not have control over 3rd party applications but they do decide who gets banned and who does not.

  • Tooshjr's avatar
    Tooshjr
    12 years ago

    "As there are several tools strictly forbidden, using this tool is at your own risk and could cause an account ban." - I think that says enough. If you don't want to run the risk of a ban just run it as it was made.

  • They didn't specify Tri-Def is strictly forbidden, those kinds of tools are typically for cheating, this has nothing to do with cheating at all.