grieferz
PARDON MY FRENCH
Sunday, March 15, 2026
Saturday, March 14, 2026
misuse of words
"That’s because Claude Code is designed to be secure by default, asking before every action that could change your system or code."
that is not actually security.
that also not good ux.
man, i kinda hate software.
Thursday, March 12, 2026
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
so many options
🌐 1. Archetype‑Based ECS
(Unity DOTS, Bevy, Frostbite internal systems)
🧩 Real‑world examples
| Engine / Game | Why it fits archetype ECS |
|---|---|
| Unity DOTS demos (Megacity, Entity Component Samples) | Tens of thousands of entities, heavy physics, chunk‑optimized memory layout |
| Bevy engine games (Rust gamedev scene) | Hot‑loop systems, predictable scheduling, parallelism |
| Frostbite engine subsystems (Battlefield series) | Massive crowds, destructible environments, physics‑dense scenes |
🧠 Why these games choose archetype ECS
- They need maximum throughput
- They have huge numbers of similar entities
- They benefit from chunked SoA memory
- They rely on tight, predictable pipelines
🧪 Typical workloads
- 10k–100k entities
- physics‑heavy
- AI swarms
- particle systems
- large open worlds
🌿 2. Sparse‑Set ECS
(Flecs, EnTT, Svelto.ECS, many custom engines)
🧩 Real‑world examples
| Engine / Game | Why it fits sparse‑set ECS |
|---|---|
| Flecs‑based games (indie & AA titles) | Flexible component sets, ergonomic queries |
| EnTT‑based engines (C++ gamedev) | Great for tools, editors, gameplay logic |
| Svelto.ECS (used in Unity‑based production games) | Hybrid ECS with strong separation of concerns |
🧠 Why these games choose sparse‑set ECS
- They want flexibility over raw speed
- They mix gameplay logic + simulation
- They need ergonomic iteration
- They want easy debugging
🧪 Typical workloads
- 1k–20k entities
- mixed gameplay + simulation
- tools, editors, UI
- AI, inventory, quests
Sparse‑set ECS is the “default good choice” for most games.
🌳 3. Hybrid Node/ECS
(Godot 4, Roblox, Unreal’s internal component model)
🧩 Real‑world examples
| Engine / Game | Why it fits hybrid ECS |
|---|---|
| Godot 4 | Nodes for creators, ECS under the hood for performance |
| Roblox | Hierarchical data model + component‑like behaviors |
| Unreal Engine (Actor + Component system) | OO façade, data‑oriented internals |
🧠 Why these games choose hybrid ECS
- They need creator‑friendly ergonomics
- They want OO‑style scripting
- They hide ECS complexity behind nodes/actors
- They support UGC or large teams
🧪 Typical workloads
- scripting‑heavy
- UGC platforms
- tools + gameplay + simulation
- moderate entity counts
This is the “best of both worlds” dialect for engines that must be ergonomic.
🏷️ 4. Tag‑Heavy / Minimal ECS
(Roguelikes, small engines, hobby engines, ECS‑lite frameworks)
🧩 Real‑world examples
| Engine / Game | Why it fits tag‑heavy ECS |
|---|---|
| RogueBasin ECS tutorials | Simple tags for AI, FOV, inventory |
| Amethyst (early versions) | Tag‑driven systems |
| Many custom roguelike engines | Minimal data, lots of markers |
🧠 Why these games choose tag‑heavy ECS
- They want simplicity
- They don’t need high performance
- They want clear, readable logic
- They use ECS mainly for decoupling
🧪 Typical workloads
- < 1k entities
- turn‑based
- grid‑based
- simple AI
- minimal physics
This is perfect for prototypes, small games, and teaching.
🧬 5. “OO façade → ECS IR” (your proposed dialect)
This is the one you’re designing:
OO‑looking code → ECS IR → SoA kernels, with an AI‑agent co‑designer.
🧩 Real‑world analogues
| System | Why it’s similar |
|---|---|
| Unity DOTS with Roslyn analyzers | OO → ECS transformation |
| Svelto.ECS | Strong separation of logic and data |
| Frostbite’s internal tools | Codegen + data‑oriented pipelines |
| ISPC / Halide | High‑level code → optimized kernels |
This is the “future dialect” — and your agent‑native approach makes it viable.