Particle Editor
Beginners and those who just want to use the already existing particle effects might like to first read Particles for Beginners.
Editing the particles themselves (size etc):
Open your test map in Doom3Ed and press F2 (this brings up the game in windowed) and in the console type EditParticles. This will bring up the particle editor in Doom3Ed and allows you to make changes, as well as see the result of them in the renderview.
Once the particle editor loads, you should see something like this:
File:Http://www.iddevnet.com/doom3/editor particle a.png
Now to explain a few things. At the top you have the particle name next to "particle", next to it you have new, save, and save as. Now, for easiest editing of particles, load up an existing particle, such as the leaf one in the example, modify it and then use "save as". I will explain a bit more further down.
Firstly, and most importantly, we have material. This is the path to your material; not the image file but the material for your custom leaf. So for example you can see the example above has textures/particles/tdm_leaves_01. If you know the name of your material (for example textures/particles/green_leaves) then you can type that in there and press enter and it will find it by itself showing the changes in the render view.
Now that you can see your custom material we can continue on to the size of the leaves etc.
Bunching; this determines how much the particles tend to bunch together, 0 meaning they want to spread out as evenly as possible, while 1 means that they bunch together a bit. The effect is not actually that noticeable mind.
Count controls how many particles there are, so basically the example shown has 32 particles in total. Obviously the more you have, the more dense the tree. This is a slider so slide it around as necessary. Alternatively you can input a value into the box and then press apply down the bottom right.
To see the changes you are making, center your camera in the render view on the tree and press F7 and F6. F7 rebuilds everything and F6 enables animations. Leave it in render view and move the particle editor to the side so you can see the render view (to watch the changes you are making as you make them).
You will also notice the "time" input beneath it. This is the lifespan of a particle in seconds. If I may suggest, don't mess with this, as putting it too low will make the particle lifespan visible, as in you'll notice them appearing/disappearing etc. If you put it to something ridiculous, like 99999, then it will load for extremely long, and sometimes not at all. It's best to leave it at 300 (5 minute), as you won't notice the tree leaves changing around every 5 minutes.
Now, distribution. This is where things get a little more annoying. You'll notice 3 check dots - rect, cylinder, and sphere. Realistically you'd want to use sphere, but for some reason the algorithm for distribution in the sphere (at least for the leaves) does not work correctly and you get several particles occupying the same spot, which results in z-fighting and generally looks really bad. Now, the rectangle distribution works perfect; particles are properly distributed and there is no z-fighting, but it's a rectangular shape, but can look ok if not too many particles are used. Another alternative is the cylinder distribution. Cylinder distribution works well but annoyingly enough the particles get distributed only on the walls of the cylinder, which means a hole in the middle, so you need to adjust the particle size and cylinder size so that there is no hole in the middle.
The values to the right are the size values in doom units, so change that to roughly be the size you want the leaves to cover. If you selected cylindrical distribution, don't bother adding a ring value as it just makes it larger in diameter, so leave it at 0.
The offset is the offset from the center of the particle entity. Try keeping the leaves centered on the particle emitter, as Doom 3's light rendering system calculates whether or not to light the particles by checking whether the particle emitter is inside the boundary of the light; if yes then applies the lighting to it, but if not then it leaves the particle unaffected, ID did this for performance reasons.
Random Distribution is just what it says, so you may want to leave that ticked.
Speed; leave that at 0 for the leaves as that is the speed at which the particles move away from the center of the emitter.
Size is self-explanatory; it's the size of each particle.
Rotation is rotation speed of the particle and aspect stretches the particle from the center of the emitter. So leave these 2 alone for leaves.
Notice that each of these has 2 sliders. This is for time based particles, so one slider is "from" and the second is "to". This is governed over the lifespan, so for example a particle that has sizes 0 to 50 and a lifespan of 10 would mean that it would gradually increase it's size to 50 from 0 over a span of 10 seconds. So for leaves this means that you leave both sliders at the same value. The other values below the speed, size, rotation, and aspect sliders do various things and you can mess around with them if you wish but they are not useful for leaves.
Now that you know what each value does, just mess around with them until you reach something that looks good.
Once you have something that you wish to keep, it is time to save it. Now, press save as (presuming you modified one of the existing leaf particles) and it will come up with a dialog asking for the particle name. Enter the name you wish (for example green_leaves_01) and press . Now it comes up with a path dialog. Browse to the Doom3/base/particles folder (if there is no particles folder create one) and name it as what you want (this is the file name, not the particle name), for example something like "mymap_particles" and then press ok. Make sure you save it into doom3/base/particles as saving it into doom3/darkmod/particles WILL NOT WORK. [EDIT - Someone check me but I tested this and it does seem you can save it direct in the darkmod/particles folder but if you save it in base/particles then it goes in darkmod/particles anyway. Also note that if you select an existing file it will append it - it does not overwrite but adds new particles definitions to existing files if selected. - Fidcal] Once you save it there you will find the particle file (in this case "mymap_particles.prt") in the doom3/darkmod/particles folder; strange, yes, but it saves it there due to the way Doom 3 mod-loading works.
Now in DarkRadiant you should be able to find your new leaf particle when browsing through the particle list.
Tutorial by Dram