出典(authority):フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』「2015/12/24 22:24:49」(JST)
開発元 | DICE |
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最新版 | v3.0 |
対応OS | Microsoft Windows, Xbox 360, Xbox One,PlayStation 4,PlayStation 3, |
種別 | ゲームエンジン |
ライセンス | プロプライエタリ |
公式サイト | http://www.dice.se/frostbite |
テンプレートを表示 |
Frostbite(フロストバイト)とはEA Digital Illusions CE社開発のゲームエンジンである。 現在、このエンジンのプラットフォームはPlayStation 3やXbox 360、Windowsに対応している。主なゲームに、バトルフィールド バッド カンパニー以降のバトルフィールドシリーズで採用されている。Frostbiteはバトルフィールドのファーストパーソン・シューティングゲームを目的に使用されていたが、レーシングゲームやリアルタイムストラテジーゲームにも採用されるようになった。
2008年開発、バトルフィールド バッド カンパニーに採用されている。 様々な音から周囲の音量を下げ、特定の音だけを聴きやすくするHDR Audioを採用。プレイヤーが壁などのオブジェクトを破壊可能にするDestruction 1.0を採用。
2009年開発、バトルフィールド1943等に採用されている。Destruction 1.0を向上させたDestruction 2.0を搭載。Windowsにも対応され、完全ではないがDirectX 11にも対応した。
2011年開発、バトルフィールド3に採用されている。DirectX 11に完全に対応し、APIや64ビットプロセッサにも対応したが[1]、DirectX 9には対応しなくなった。
2013年発売の バトルフィールド4に採用されている。 DirectX11.1に対応している。
Title | Year | Engine Version | Developer(s) | Platform(s) | Genre(s) | DirectX 9.0c | DirectX 10 | DirectX 11 |
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バトルフィールド バッド カンパニー | 2008 | 1.0 | EA Digital Illusions CE | PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 | ファーストパーソンシューティング | |||
バトルフィールド1943 | 2009[2] | 1.5 | EA Digital Illusions CE | PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 | ファーストパーソンシューティング | |||
バトルフィールド バッド カンパニー2 | 2010 | 1.5 | EA Digital Illusions CE | Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 | ファーストパーソンシューティング | Y | Y | Y |
メダル・オブ・オナー (2010年) (マルチプレイヤーのみ) | 2010 | 1.5 | EA Digital Illusions CE | Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 | ファーストパーソンシューティング | Y | Y | Y |
バトルフィールド バッド カンパニー2 ベトナム | 2010[3] | 1.5 | EA Digital Illusions CE | Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 | ファーストパーソンシューティング | Y | Y | Y |
バトルフィールド3 | 2011[4] | 2 | EA Digital Illusions CE | Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 | ファーストパーソンシューティング | Y | Y | |
ニード・フォー・スピード ザ・ラン | 2011 | 2 | EA Black Box | Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 | レースゲーム | Y | Y | |
メダル・オブ・オナー ウォーファイター | 2012 | 2 | Danger Close Games | Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 | ファーストパーソンシューティング | Y | Y | |
Army of Two: The Devil's Cartel | 2013 | 2 | Visceral Games | PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 | サードパーソン・シューティングゲーム | |||
バトルフィールド4[5] | 2013 | 3 | EA Digital Illusions CE | Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One | ファーストパーソンシューティング | Y | Y | |
ニード・フォー・スピード ライバルズ[6] | 2013 | 3 | Ghost Games | Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One | レースゲーム | Y | Y | |
Plants vs. Zombies: Garden Warfare | 2014 | 3 | PopCap Games | Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One | タワーディフェンス, サードパーソン・シューティングゲーム | Y | Y | |
Dragon Age III: Inquisition[7] | 2014 | 3 | BioWare | Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One | ロールプレイングゲーム | ? | ? | |
バトルフィールド ハードライン | 2015 | 3 | Visceral Games EA Digital Illusions CE |
Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One | ファーストパーソンシューティング | ? | Y | |
Star Wars: Battlefront[8] | 2015 | 3 | EA Digital Illusions CE | Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One | ファーストパーソンシューティング, サードパーソン・シューティングゲーム | ? | ? | |
Untitled Mass Effect [9] | TBA | 3 | BioWare | TBA | アクションロールプレイング, サードパーソン・シューティングゲーム | ? | ? | ? |
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この項目は、コンピュータゲームに関連した書きかけの項目です。この項目を加筆・訂正などしてくださる協力者を求めています(ポータル コンピュータゲーム / ウィキプロジェクト コンピュータゲーム)。 |
Frostbite | |
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Frostbitten toes two to three days after mountain climbing
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Classification and external resources | |
Specialty | Emergency medicine, orthopedics |
ICD-10 | T33-T35 |
ICD-9-CM | 991.0-991.3 |
DiseasesDB | 31167 |
MedlinePlus | 000057 |
eMedicine | emerg/209 med/2815 derm/833 ped/803 |
Patient UK | Frostbite |
MeSH | D005627 |
Frostbite is the medical condition in which localized damage is caused to skin and other tissues due to freezing. Frostbite is most likely to happen in body parts farthest from the heart and those with large exposed areas. The initial stages of frostbite are sometimes called frostnip.
The several classifications for tissue damage caused by extreme cold include:
At or below 0 °C (32 °F), blood vessels close to the skin start to constrict, and blood is shunted away from the extremities via the action of glomus bodies. The same response may also be a result of exposure to high winds. This constriction helps to preserve core body temperature. In extreme cold, or when the body is exposed to cold for long periods, this protective strategy can reduce blood flow in some areas of the body to dangerously low levels. This lack of blood leads to the eventual freezing and death of skin tissue in the affected areas. Of the four degrees of frostbite, each has varying degrees of pain.[3]
This is called frostnip and only affects the surface of the skin, which is frozen. On the onset, itching and pain occur, and then the skin develops white, red, and yellow patches and becomes numb. The area affected by frostnip usually does not become permanently damaged, as only the skin's top layers are affected. Long-term insensitivity to both heat and cold can sometimes happen after suffering from frostnip.
If freezing continues, the skin may freeze and harden, but the deep tissues are not affected and remain soft and normal. Second-degree injury usually blisters 1–2 days after becoming frozen. The blisters may become hard and blackened, but usually appear worse than they are. Most of the injuries heal in one month, but the area may become permanently insensitive to both heat and cold.
If the area freezes further, deep frostbite occurs. The muscles, tendons, blood vessels, and nerves all freeze. The skin is hard, feels waxy, and use of the area is lost temporarily, and in severe cases, permanently. The deep frostbite results in areas of purplish blisters which turn black and which are generally blood-filled. Nerve damage in the area can result in a loss of feeling. This extreme frostbite may result in fingers and toes being amputated if the area becomes infected with gangrene. If the frostbite has gone on untreated, they may fall off. The extent of the damage done to the area by the freezing process of the frostbite may take several months to assess, and this often delays surgery to remove the dead tissue.[4]
Inadequate blood circulation when the ambient temperature is below freezing point leads to frostbite. This can be because the body is constricting circulation to extremities on its own to preserve core temperature and fight hypothermia. In this scenario, the same factors that can lead to hypothermia (extreme cold, inadequate clothing, wet clothes, wind chill) can contribute to frostbite. Poor circulation can also be caused by other factors such as tight clothing or boots, cramped positions, fatigue, certain medications, smoking, alcohol use, or diseases that affect the blood vessels, such as diabetes.[5]
Exposure to liquid nitrogen and other cryogenic liquids can cause frostbite, as well as prolonged contact with aerosol sprays (see deodorant burn).
Risk factors for frostbite include using beta-blockers and having conditions such as diabetes and peripheral neuropathy.[citation needed]
The decision to thaw is based on proximity to a stable, warm environment. If rewarmed tissue ends up refreezing, more damage to tissue will be done. Excessive movement of frostbitten tissue can cause ice crystals that have formed in the tissue to do further damage. Splinting and/or wrapping frostbitten extremities are therefore recommended to prevent such movement. For this reason, rubbing, massaging, shaking, or otherwise applying physical force to frostbitten tissues in an attempt to rewarm them can be harmful.[6]
Warming can be achieved in one of two ways:
Passive rewarming[7] involves using body heat or ambient room temperature to aid the person's body in rewarming itself. This includes wrapping in blankets or moving to a warmer environment.[8]
Active rewarming is the direct addition of heat to a person, usually in addition to the treatments included in passive rewarming.[7] Active rewarming requires more equipment, and therefore may be difficult to perform in the prehospital environment.[6] When performed, active rewarming seeks to warm the injured tissue as quickly as possible without burning. This is desirable, because the faster tissue is thawed, the less tissue damage occurs.[6] Active rewarming is usually achieved by immersing the injured tissue in a water-bath that is held between 40 and 42 °C (104 and 108 °F). Warming of peripheral tissues can increase blood flow from these areas back to the body's core. This may produce a decrease in the body's core temperature and increase the risk of abnormal heart rhythms.[9]
Debridement and/or amputation of necrotic tissue is usually delayed. This has led to the adage "Frozen in January, amputate in July",[10] with exceptions only being made for signs of infections or gas gangrene.[11]
A number of long term sequelae can occur after frostbite. These include transient or permanent changes in sensation, paresthesia, increased sweating, cancers, and bone destruction/arthritis in the area affected.[12]
Evidence is insufficient to determine whether or not hyperbaric oxygen therapy as an adjunctive treatment can assist in tissue salvage.[13] Cases have been case reported, but no randomized control trial has been performed on humans.[14][15][16][17][18]
Medical sympathectomy using intravenous reserpine has also been attempted with limited success.[12] Studies have suggested that administration of tissue plasminogen activator (tPa) either intravenously or intra-arterially may decrease the likelihood of eventual need for amputation.[19]
While extreme weather conditions (cold and wind) increase the risk of frostbite, certain individuals and population groups appear more disposed to frostbite.[20][21]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frostbite. |
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Travelling in cold weather. |
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リンク元 | 「凍傷」「凍瘡」「しもやけ」 |
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