Visible Invisibility: Difference between revisions

m
update links
m (update links)
m (update links)
Line 122:
== Video Games ==
* Rogues using stealth in most D&D-based video games, including ''[[Baldur's Gate]]'' and ''Icewind Dale''.
* ''[[BioshockBioShock (series)]]'': While you're standing still with the Natural Camouflage tonic equipped, your hands and guns are transparent.
* All characters with [[Flash Step|Flash Steps]] in the DS ''[[Bleach]]'' fighters are shown as turning transparent and dashing to the specified direction to the user of the said character, but disappearing entirely and appearing elsewhere to the opposing player. Does not apply to actual teleports, which a few characters possess.
* All stealth units in ''[[Command & Conquer]]: Tiberian Sun'' (completely invisible to the enemy, of course).
Line 128:
* The Specters of ''[[Doom (series)|Doom]] I and II'' are just Demons with the transparency turned up. On lower-end systems (I'm looking at you, 32X), they were closer to fuzzy background distortions.
* In ''[[The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion]]'' there are two kinds of invisibility: regular invisibility and chameleon. Regular invisibility uses the transparent effect, unless it's another character using it, in which case they go completely invisible. Chameleon also uses partial transparency, whether it's on your or another person. However, if you reach 100% chameleon, you are completely invisible, even to yourself. This is an infamous [[Game Breaker]], since regular invisibility goes away when you attack, but chameleon doesn't.
* ''[[EveEVE Online]]'' ships with cloaking devices are semitransparent to the player controlling the ship and completely invisible to everyone else, including teammates.
* Your [[Player Character]] looks like this when under the Invisible [[Status Buff]] in ''[[Final Fantasy XI]]''.
* A player's own cloaked units in ''[[Starcraft]]''.