Greetings!
First off, I just want to say how impressed I am with Diaspora. It looks amazing, and I have greatly enjoyed the short time that I have been puttering around in it.
Here's my ridiculous idea: I've been engaged in a series of discussions regarding the ideal control scheme for maneuvering a space fighter with true, 6-Degrees-of-Freedom. I believe that utilizing a set-up similar to many real spaceships (Gemini, Apollo, and the Space Shuttle) would be very beneficial:
- Rotational control (traditional 3DoF flightstick) for the main hand.
-Translational control (Using a Novint Falcon simply for proof-of-concept) for the off-hand.
-Car pedals for controlling primary acceleration/deceleration, with the clutch pedal for toggling "glide mode."
Is there any way that a Novint Falcon could be mapped for translation controls? If not, can anyone think of a space game that might offer this?
I can borrow a friend's Novint Falcon just so that I can validate/invalidate the overall concept. The problem is that, of the few space games that actually feature translation control, it's not available as an analog input; rather, it's mapped to keyboard buttons.
Sorry for such a bizarre question, but I really believe that such a set-up could work very well, and it's gotten to the point that going back and forth on forums is akin to beating our heads against our monitors. Someone needs to actually video record themselves controlling a simulated ship with physical 6DoF controls, or we're just going to keep going around in circles. Plus, I just think that it would be AMAZING to control a Viper or any FS2 ships this way!
Some of the more technical-minded contributors are considering some very creative DIY solutions, such as hacking together different flightsticks, or even scratch-building a 6DoF control yoke. Pretty neat stuff.
Anyway, sorry for the strange question. This community seems to have a fair share of creative and knowledgable problem-solvers, and I'm hoping that someone here might be able to help us.
Thank you for your time.