Book Image

GameMaker Cookbook

Book Image

GameMaker Cookbook

Overview of this book

GameMaker: Studio started off as a tool capable of creating simple games using a drag-and-drop interface. Since then, it has grown to become a powerful instrument to make release-ready games for PC, Mac, mobile devices, and even current-gen consoles. GameMaker is designed to allow its users to develop games without having to learn any of the complex programming languages such as C++ or Java. It also allows redistribution across multiple platforms. This book teaches you to harness GameMaker: Studio’s full potential and take your game development to new heights. It begins by covering the basics and lays a solid foundation for advanced GameMaker concepts. Moving on, it covers topics such as controls, physics, and advanced movement, employing a strategic approach to the learning curve. The book concludes by providing insights into complex concepts such as the GUI, menus, save system, lighting, particles, and VFX. By the end of the book, you will be able to design games using GameMaker: Studio and implement the same techniques in other games you intend to design.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
GameMaker Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Creating scoring mechanism


In the days of arcades, a high score was king. It wasn't enough to beat a game; you had to get in the top 10 highest scores in order to claim local fame. Once your score was high enough to knock someone out of the top ten, the victory could be finalized by putting your initials next to it. Or a dirty word. Not that I've ever done that….

Regardless, a lot of games today don't rely on a scoring system, but focus on the story, experience, or multiplayer rankings. Let's bring back a little piece of gaming history by creating a simple scoring mechanism.

Getting ready

This recipe does not involve any new sprites or other assets but does require a new object. Call the object obj_score and leave the sprite box blank.

How to do it...

  1. In the Object Properties for obj_score, add a Create event.

  2. Drag Set Score from the Score tab to the Actions box, and have it set the score to 0.

  3. Create a Draw GUI event and drag Draw Score to the Actions tab with the following values:

    x: 32
    y: 32
    caption: Score:
  4. Close the obj_score Object Properties window and open obj_enemy_patrol.

  5. Add a Collision event with obj_projectile and, from the Main1 tab, drag and drop Destroy Instance to the Actions box (Applies to: self).

  6. Drag Set Score to the Actions box and change the new score to 10 relative.

  7. Close the Object Properties window and open obj_projectile.

  8. Add a Collision event with obj_enemy_patrol and drag and drop Destroy instance at Position like you did previously.

How it works...

GameMaker is again doing a lot of the heavy lifting, here. You created obj_score to keep track of scoring. Not assigning a sprite to it will allow the object to be in a room, affecting the game, without being seen. The rest of the recipe is simply placing the score counter as a GUI element, checking for collisions between projectile and enemy, and adding points and destroying the two when they collide.

There's more...

In this recipe, obj_score acted as what's referred to as a controller object. These objects are often invisible and control specific aspects of the game. Since an object needs to be active in order for its actions and variables to be used, any aspect of the game that needs to be present without interruption should be assigned to a controller. I use controllers for music, HUD, global variables, and more.

See also

Most chapters going forward will deal with controllers and their various functions.