Trailer

From The Battle for Wesnoth Wiki
Revision as of 06:26, 25 February 2007 by ChameleonDave (talk | contribs) (Online presence: update)

Here is a video showcasing some of the artwork, gameplay, and music of "The Battle for Wesnoth." Its purpose is to publicize the game and show people what they're missing! You are free to distribute the video to online video sites. Since the art used was licensed under the Gnu General Public License (GPL), the video itself is a GPL'd work, and you are obligated to indicate this when distributing the video.

Trailer based on Wesnoth 1.1.2, by Radoz

It is really based on 1.1.2, not 1.2 sadly. So while very good and still fitting, it doesn't show the latest features until someone creates a new trailer. Are you the one who can do it?

Online presence

If you distribute the video somewhere, post the link here. You may have to convert the video to another format first (leading to some loss of quality), because some sites do not support OGG Theora.

 * Note that the first time the video was uploaded to YouTube it was removed, and replaced with the message "This video is no longer available due to a copyright claim by Viacom International Inc." Note that this claim is false. The EFF has a page on Viacom video takedowns. YouTube has since reinstated the video.

File format

The video files' extension is .ogg, which indicates that it uses the Ogg container format. Ogg is capable of containing a range of codecs, but it usually holds audio encoded with the Vorbis codec and/or video encoded with the Theora codec. Our trailer contains both.

If a file contains just audio, it is normally called an "Ogg Vorbis" file. If it also contains video, then it is normally called "Ogg Theora", although "Ogg Theora+Vorbis" might more accurately convey the fact that it is a video with a soundtrack.

We use these codecs because they offer high quality at small file sizes; plus they are free and Open Source, which fits in with the philosophy of Battle for Wesnoth as free, Open Source software.

The following links may be helpful for further information:

Playing the file

Wikipedia has a guide to viewing Ogg files which you may find helpful: link.

Linux and similar Unix-based systems

If you have a reasonably recent Linux system, you will probably be able to play the video immediately.

Linux distros vary so much that specific advice may not be helpful, but a good approach is just to try playing the file in your favourite player. If it fails, try another one. If they all fail, use your distro's approved installation method (e.g. Synaptic, YaST...) to search for the relevant libraries (libtheora and libvorbis) and a decent player (VLC, Kplayer, Mplayer, Xine, Kaffeine, Helix, Totem...).

Windows and Macs

Usually, you won't be able to play the trailer until you install some software with Ogg support. There are several available. The simplest option is probably to install the VLC player.