Playing Surprising Death it really made me want to step foot in the truth. Instead, I continued to play Surprising Death. If I had this PS4 controller damaged, I would get the best of both worlds.
YouTuber Allen Pan is an electrical engineer known as wacky science experimentsents and casual hacks gadget, too his latest creation it is a new way of playing Surprising Death. The contraption, which Pan calls "the cheapest VR budget," is a standard ride with a few changes that connect to Dualshock 4 to translate the ride forward into the game.
Pan uses a rotation code from a treadmill (a counterclockwise method) integrated with an Arduino chip to calculate its travel speed. He then uses a digital double potentiometer to act as a barrier. When the speed of stepping up reaches a certain point, it will tell Sam Porter Bridges to start moving. When the treadmill reaches a faster speed, it will eventually tell Bridges to start using it.
Based on the video, it looks like it really works. As Pan's ground-level machinery is destroyed, he must rely entirely on his power to rotate it. That extra resistance is worth it, because Bridges does not go any further floor in the game but instead traverses the uneven and marshy terrain.
Of course, one of the things he plans to do is move in between Surprising Death Aside from the other big open world games that moving too fast or turning a wrong track will send the Bridges across the mud and risk endangering the precious asset they are trying to move. Finding a middle ground can be difficult enough for an administrator.
In the Pan treadmill, it looks tedious and tiring. Mission accomplished.