# E1.M2 — IsometricCameraController ## Summary | Field | Value | |--------|--------| | **Module ID** | E1.M2 | | **Epic** | [Epic 1 — Core Player Runtime](../epics/epic_01_core_player_runtime.md) | | **Stage target** | Prototype | | **Status** | In progress — follow + `CameraState` + **discrete zoom bands** shipped ([NEON-25](https://neon-sprawl.atlassian.net/browse/NEON-25), [NEON-26](https://neon-sprawl.atlassian.net/browse/NEON-26)); occlusion + hardening open ([NEON-27](https://neon-sprawl.atlassian.net/browse/NEON-27)–[NEON-28](https://neon-sprawl.atlassian.net/browse/NEON-28)); see [dependency register](module_dependency_register.md) | | **Jira** | Feature [NEON-10](https://neon-sprawl.atlassian.net/browse/NEON-10); prototype backlog stories under parent [NEON-1](https://neon-sprawl.atlassian.net/browse/NEON-1) — [Jira backlog](#jira-backlog) | ## Purpose **Authority:** [Client vs server](client_server_authority.md#e1m2-isometriccameracontroller) — camera is client-local for prototype; server does not use camera pose for gameplay checks. Delivers an isometric follow camera that keeps the player readable during motion: follow behavior, discrete zoom bands, occlusion handling, and **yaw held at a fixed default for players in early prototypes** so combat telegraphs and UI stay easy to reason about. **After release, the shipped camera model is settled** (fixed presentation vs product setting that allows yaw)—we do **not** plan to revisit that post-launch. **Before release**, we may still decide to expose **yaw orbit** for comfort; the implementation follows the [mid-project rotation policy](#mid-project-rotation-policy-practical-compromise) so that decision stays mid-project scope, not a rewrite. ## Responsibilities - Locked isometric follow for **player-facing controls in prototype**: **yaw = 0** (no orbit bound in UI) while the rig and **`CameraState`** still model **yaw explicitly** so optional orbit can be enabled later via config and input binding. - Zoom bands and configuration-driven limits. - Occlusion policy so critical gameplay elements remain visible where possible. - Pitch / roll remain fixed for the isometric presentation; only **yaw** is the optional future degree of freedom. ## Mid-project rotation policy (practical compromise) **Intent:** Ship prototypes and early milestones **as if** the camera were fully fixed from the player’s perspective, without closing the door to **yaw orbit** before release. | Topic | Direction | |--------|-----------| | **When this applies** | **Mid-project only.** We may enable or keep disabled **yaw orbit** while still in development. **Post-release**, treat the chosen shipped behavior as **final**—no planned pivot between “fixed” and “orbit” for live players. | | **Implementation** | Single seam: e.g. **`allow_yaw`**, **`max_yaw_deg`**, or equivalent; default keeps **yaw at 0** and **no rotate input** until product + combat readability agree. `CameraState` carries **yaw** (default `0`) so consumers do not assume “camera yaw does not exist.” | | **Gameplay semantics** | Prefer **world-anchored** movement, targeting, and server checks—not **camera-relative** aim—so turning yaw on later is mostly **presentation + UI**, not a combat authority redesign. | | **Telegraphs & VFX** | Design **now** for a world where yaw might exist: ground shapes remain **world-accurate**; plan **screen-space or height** readability affordances where foreshortening under yaw would otherwise lie (outlines, rings, bars—exact art TBD). | | **Migration risk** | If we add yaw mid-project, expect a **telegraph + minimap / compass** pass. **Fixed → yaw** is usually lower risk than **yaw → fixed** (content and players may already assume spin for sightlines). | ## Key contracts | Contract | Role | |----------|------| | `CameraState` | Current follow target, zoom level, **yaw** (default `0`; optional future orbit), and policy flags for consumers (e.g. risk UX). | | `ZoomBandConfig` | Data-driven min/max or discrete zoom steps. | | `OcclusionPolicy` | Rules for fading, dithering, or offset when geometry blocks the view. | ## Module dependencies - **E1.M1** — InputAndMovementRuntime: camera follows the player anchor derived from movement/position. ## Dependents (by design) - **E6.M2** — Consent and risk UX may use camera-adjacent presentation; epic lists E1.M2 as a dependency for in-zone risk signaling and readability. ## Related implementation slices See Epic 1 **Slice 2 — Locked isometric camera**: follow-center, zoom bands, occlusion policy, **yaw fixed for players in prototype** (implementation still models yaw per [mid-project rotation policy](#mid-project-rotation-policy-practical-compromise)); optional telemetry such as throttled `camera_zoom_changed` and perf stress markers for occluders. ## Implementation snapshot (NEON-25 + NEON-26, 2026-04-08) - **Godot:** `client/scripts/isometric_follow_camera.gd` on **`World/IsometricFollowCamera`**; child **`Camera3D`** (current). **`scripts/camera_state.gd`** — `RefCounted` tick snapshot (`yaw` = orbit component, **0** while **`allow_yaw`** is false; **`distance`** = effective follow distance; **`zoom_band_index`**; **`focus_world`**, **`follow_target_path`**). - **Seam:** **`allow_yaw`** / **`max_yaw_deg`** on the rig; orbit would adjust **`_orbit_yaw_rad`** (no input bound yet). **Presentation** compass uses **`presentation_yaw_deg`** separately from orbit **`yaw`** in state. - **Zoom:** **`ZoomBandConfig`** resource (`client/scripts/zoom_band_config.gd`); default **`client/resources/isometric_zoom_bands.tres`** on main rig. Bands are **distance-only** (ascending near→far); **pitch / FOV** unchanged vs NEON-25. Input: **`camera_zoom_in`** / **`camera_zoom_out`** in `client/project.godot` (mouse wheel + `=` / `-` + keypad **+** / **−**). **`follow_distance`** remains **fallback** when config is null or has no bands; state **`zoom_band_index`** is **0** in that case. **`zoom_band_changed`** signal on rig; **TODO(E9.M1)** for throttled `camera_zoom_changed` telemetry. ## Jira backlog Parent epic: [NEON-1 — Epic 1 — Core Player Runtime](https://neon-sprawl.atlassian.net/browse/NEON-1). | Key | Type | Summary | |-----|------|---------| | [NEON-10](https://neon-sprawl.atlassian.net/browse/NEON-10) | Feature | E1.M2 — IsometricCameraController (module umbrella) | | [NEON-25](https://neon-sprawl.atlassian.net/browse/NEON-25) | Story | Isometric follow camera (fixed yaw prototype; CameraState seam) | | [NEON-29](https://neon-sprawl.atlassian.net/browse/NEON-29) | Story | Expand prototype client district for camera/nav stress QA | | [NEON-26](https://neon-sprawl.atlassian.net/browse/NEON-26) | Story | ZoomBandConfig + discrete zoom input (clamped) | | [NEON-27](https://neon-sprawl.atlassian.net/browse/NEON-27) | Story | OcclusionPolicy — keep player readable through geometry | | [NEON-28](https://neon-sprawl.atlassian.net/browse/NEON-28) | Story | Camera integration hardening + dependent contract notes | Suggested order: NEON-25 → NEON-26 → NEON-27 → NEON-28. [NEON-29](https://neon-sprawl.atlassian.net/browse/NEON-29) may run in parallel with or after NEON-25 (scene/nav geography; does not require zoom/occlusion). ## Risks and telemetry - Occlusion hiding telegraphs: tune policy early and include readability checklist in prototype gates. - Enabling **yaw orbit** mid-project without a telegraph/UI/minimap pass can undermine readability; design ground effects for **world accuracy** plus **screen-space or height** cues early (see [mid-project rotation policy](#mid-project-rotation-policy-practical-compromise)). ## Source anchors - Master plan: [`neon_sprawl_vision.plan.md`](../../../neon_sprawl_vision.plan.md) — Core Epic Map, Epic 1. - [Module dependency register](module_dependency_register.md)