Making textures with WadMaker Last edited 2 years ago2022-09-01 11:01:55 UTC

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Using WadMaker to make Half-Life and Counter-Strike textures

WadMaker is a new tool for making Half-Life and Counter-Strike textures. It's designed to make creating and updating wad files easier and faster than with established tools like Wally. It can convert a directory full of images into a wad file with just a single action. Let's see how that works:

1. Installing WadMaker

Start by downloading the latest version of WadMaker from here: WadMaker_SpriteMaker_1.2.zip. Then extract the zip file somewhere on your computer, for example to C:\HL\Tools (so you'll end up with a C:\HL\Tools\WadMaker_SpriteMaker_1.2 directory):
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2. Creating a directory for your texture images

Next, create a directory for your texture image files. The name of the directory will be the name of your wad file. Then find some image files and put them in the directory you just created. WadMaker supports png, jpg, gif, bmp and tga, but also Photoshop and Krita files. If you're using Gimp, Aseprite or another program then you'll need to configure a conversion tool first (see the documentation). Here, I've created a directory named C:\HL\Textures\chapter1 and added a couple of png and Krita files to it:
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3. Creating a wad file

Now drag this directory on top of WadMaker.exe:
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If you see a blue 'Windows protected your PC' window pop up, click 'More info' and then click the 'Run anyway' button. You'll briefly see a console window pop up, and then a chapter1.wad file will appear next to the images directory:
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Let's open the log file with Notepad to see if it contains any errors. Common problems are images with a size that's not a multiple of 16, or filenames that contain spaces or that are longer than 15 characters. Here, everything went fine:
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4. Putting a wad file in the right location

Now copy the wad file to your Half-Life\valve or Half-Life\cstrike directory.

It's also possible to let WadMaker do this for you. Create a batch file (or copy example batch file - WadMaker.bat), change its name to update chapter1 wad.bat, open it with a basic text editor like Notepad, and add the following lines:
"C:\HL\Tools\WadMaker_SpriteMaker_1.2\WadMaker.exe" "C:\HL\Textures\chapter1" "C:\Program Files (x86)\Steam\steamapps\common\Half-Life\valve\chapter1.wad"

PAUSE
The PAUSE line causes the console window to stay open until you press a key, so you don't need to open the log file to see if anything went wrong.

Now, instead of dragging the images directory on top of WadMaker.exe and then copying the wad file manually, you can double-click this batch file, and it will automatically create or update chapter1.wad in your Half-Life\valve directory. If the wad file already exists then WadMaker is smart enough to only process added, modified or deleted images, so updating usually only takes a few seconds.

5. Adding a new wad file to J.A.C.K. or Hammer

Before you can use a new wad file, you'll have to add it to your level editor.

In J.A.C.K., go to Tools -> Options to open the configuration window. Select the Game Profiles tab, then select the game configuration that you want to modify, and then go to the Textures tab in the Configuration Settings section below. Press the Add Files... button, navigate to your chapter1.wad file and add it to the list. Then press the OK button:
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In Hammer the process is similar: go to Tools -> Options, select the Textures tab, click the Add WAD button, add your chapter1.wad file to the list, then press the OK button.

Unfortunately, Hammer and J.A.C.K. will not automatically refresh their textures when a wad file is updated, so you'll have to restart your editor each time you update a wad file.

6. Creating different texture types

Half-Life uses an 8-bit indexed format for its textures, so each texture has a limit of 256 colors. With other tools it's sometimes necessary to manually create or adjust palettes, but WadMaker knows how to create palettes for all texture types that Half-Life supports. It also accepts images with transparency, so you don't need to mark transparent areas with a blue color either.

Let's take a look at each texture type:

6.1. Normal textures

The most common texture type, used for almost anything: walls, floors, ceilings, doors, and so on.

This type does not support transparency by itself, but it can be used for glass and other translucent objects by applying it to brush entities that have their Render Mode set to Texture. The overall transparency is controlled by the entity's FX Amount.

It can also be used to simulate light beams and glowing lights, when combined with the Additive Render Mode. In this mode, the value of each pixel will be 'added' to whatever is behind it. Black pixels won't add anything, so they're invisible, but the brighter a pixel is, the more 'brightness' it will add.
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6.2. Transparent textures

Textures whose name starts with a { can contain transparent areas - the final color in the palette is reserved for transparent pixels. This texture type is commonly used for fences, gratings and ladders. Transparent textures only work as expected when applied to brush entities that have their Render Mode set to Solid and their FX Amount set to 255.

Most tools require transparent parts to be marked with a specific blue color (RGB: 0 0 255), but WadMaker expects images with an alpha channel. By default, any pixel with an alpha value below 127 (any pixel that's more than 50% transparent) will become transparent.
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6.3. Water textures

Textures whose name starts with a ! will produce a wave effect when applied to a func_water entity. The 4th and 5th palette slots are used to control the water fog color and intensity. WadMaker will automatically set these colors based on the average color and brightness of the image. Dark textures are given a higher fog intensity, which results in a lower underwater view distance.
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6.4. Scrolling textures

Textures whose name starts with scroll (lowercase!) will scroll when applied to a func_conveyor entity. This is obviously useful for creating conveyor belts, but combined with the Texture and Additive render modes they can also be used for waterfalls and other special effects.

Scrolling textures always move towards the right side of the texture, so they'll need to be rotated in the editor to point them in a specific direction. Their scrolling speed is determined by the func_conveyor`'s `Conveyor Speed attribute.
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6.5. Animating and toggling textures

Sets of textures whose name starts with a +, followed by a digit (0 - 9) or letter (A - J), can be used for short animations (up to 10 frames). They can also be used to toggle between a numbered and a lettered texture (or sequence) when applied to an entity, such as func_button. Other than that, they're similar to normal textures.

The first frame must start with either +0 or +A, and there should be no 'gap' in the numbering of subsequent frames. Texture animations always play at 10 frames per second. If you need longer animations, or a different framerate, then oriented sprites are a good alternative.
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6.6. Decal textures

Only textures in decals.wad can be used as decals, so custom decals are normally only found in mods. If you want to use custom decal textures but you're not making a mod, then you can use oriented index-alpha sprites instead.

Decals can have 256 levels of transparency, but only a single color. They're used for things like bullet holes, scorch marks, blood stains, painted signs, and so on. They can be placed with the decal tool (Shift + D) or by manually placing infodecal entities. The scale and orientation of a decal depends on the texture settings of the surface its applied to.

Most workflows involve the creation of a grayscale palette, where the final color is set to the decal's color. However, WadMaker expects images with an alpha channel, and will use the average color of the input image to set the decal color. Also, decal texture names typically start with a {. This is not strictly required, but without it J.A.C.K. won't display decals correctly.
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6.7. Random tiling textures

Sets of textures whose name starts with a -, followed by a digit (0 - 9), are tiled randomly. The game will randomly pick a variant for each face, so large surfaces will look less repetitive. However, this only works well in software mode. With hardware acceleration, different variants often do not line up correctly, creating ugly seams. The random selection also changes each time the map is (re)loaded. This type is best avoided nowadays.

6.8. Fullbright textures

Textures whose name starts with a ~ were originally meant to contain fullbright pixels, but this never made it into the final game. Instead, a similar effect can be achieved with the Additive render mode.

6.9. Qpics

All of the above texture types are 'miptex' types: textures with 4 mipmap levels, whose width and height must be a multiple of 16. Qpics are a different kind: they do not contain mipmaps and can be of any size. Half-Life only used qpics for its menu and console background back in the WON days, but they're no longer used. WadMaker currently does not support qpics.

6.10. Fonts

Wad files can also contain texture fonts, but like qpics, they are no longer used. WadMaker currently does not support texture fonts.

7. Conclusion

7.1. Summary

To recap:
  1. Create and modify texture images
  2. Drag the images directory onto WadMaker.exe
  3. Copy the resulting wad to your game directory (or use a batch file to automate this)
  4. Restart your level editor
  5. Continue mapping!

7.2. Credits

Thanks to:

9 Comments

Commented 2 years ago2022-04-25 21:38:27 UTC Comment #104352
Im getting an error that says "(Texture) width is not a multiple of 16". How do i fix this ?
Commented 2 years ago2022-05-03 21:40:26 UTC Comment #104376
Nevermind i fixed it. The texture width/height need to be a number that is a multiple of 2. Numbers like 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, 1024, 2048, 4092, 16368, etc. I dont know why do you need this kind of images.
Commented 2 years ago2022-05-03 23:34:31 UTC Comment #104377
Half-Life texture sizes must be multiples of 16 (16, 32, 48, etc.), that's simply how it is. However, it might be safer to stick to powers of 2 (16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, etc.) to avoid scaling/performance/mipmap issues on certain GPUs (I don't think such issues will be very significant, but hey).

Also note that the maximum texture size is 512x512 (1024x256 and 2048x128 also work, so the actual limit is probably something like '262144 pixels').
Commented 1 year ago2023-02-20 04:37:25 UTC Comment #105113
Maybe I should use J. A. C. K. to make Half-Life Maps for Mods
Commented 11 months ago2023-11-28 20:19:24 UTC Comment #105670
It keeps telling me UnknownImageFormatException even though im using pngs
Commented 11 months ago2023-12-11 00:50:13 UTC Comment #105712
@The WON Guy: that's strange. Could you send me one of the images that's giving you trouble so I can have a look?
Commented 9 months ago2024-02-04 22:43:00 UTC Comment #105960
How do you even make a texture in multiples of 16??
Commented 8 months ago2024-02-29 23:52:12 UTC Comment #106022
By setting your canvas to multiples of 16 when you start.
If you're already past that then resize to multiples of 16.
Protip: use a calculator. ;)
Commented 4 months ago2024-06-30 00:42:34 UTC Comment #106223
Btw, qpics is still used for the "Loading..." and "Paused" graphics. Not entirely phased out yet.

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