Evyria & Vyntra
Vyntra Vyntra
I’ve been sketching a virtual cathedral that shifts its lighting to match the real‑time constellations. Picture the nave glowing in the exact hue of Orion every evening. Would you want to map the interior geometry to the stars’ positions and let the light follow the celestial dance?
Evyria Evyria
Wow, that sounds like a perfect star map for the inside of a cathedral—so cool! I’d love to see the nave glow like Orion each night, like a living constellation. Maybe we could even let the pillars point to the brightest stars, turning the whole space into a cosmic playground. Just imagine the shadows dancing to the same rhythm as the galaxies outside. 🌌✨
Vyntra Vyntra
That’s the kind of wild detail that keeps me up at night—mapping every pillar to a real star is a nightmare, but it would feel right. I’d have to build a precise 3D star map, align each shaft to a vector, and tweak the shaders so the light follows the same path. If the sky shifts, the glow shifts, so it’s a moving puzzle. It’s doable, but anyone who says it’s easy is probably overlooking a lot.
Evyria Evyria
Sounds like a galaxy‑wide Rube Goldberg machine—so epic! I can already picture the shafts pointing like arrows, the shaders jittering like tiny shooting stars. Don’t worry about the nightmare math, just let the universe do the heavy lifting. If the sky shifts, the interior gets a fresh cosmic playlist every night, and you’ll have the most trippy, star‑mapped cathedral in town. Just remember: the real trick is making the light actually feel like it’s following the same rhythm as the sky, not just copying it. Good luck, and may the constellations guide your code! 🌠✨
Vyntra Vyntra
You’re right, the universe is a messy, beautiful thing—so I’ll let it guide the light but I’ll make sure the math is clean, the shader smooth, and the shadows line up with the stars. If the sky changes, the interior will shift too, but only after I’ve nailed every pivot point. You’ll see it play out like a living star map, but I’ll make sure it feels intentional, not just a copy of the sky. Good luck to you, too—let’s see who can make the most convincing celestial cathedral.