Book Image

Unity 2017 Game AI Programming - Third Edition - Third Edition

Book Image

Unity 2017 Game AI Programming - Third Edition - Third Edition

Overview of this book

Unity 2017 provides game and app developers with a variety of tools to implement Artificial Intelligence. Leveraging these tools via Unity's API or built-in features allows limitless possibilities when it comes to creating your game's worlds and characters. This third edition with Unity will help you break down Artificial Intelligence into simple concepts to give you a fundamental understanding of the topic to build upon. Using a variety of examples, the book then takes those concepts and walks you through actual implementations designed to highlight key concepts, and features related to game AI in Unity 5. Further on you will learn to distinguish the state machine pattern and implement one of your own. This is followed by learning how to implement a basic sensory system for your AI agent and coupling it with a Finite State Machine (FSM). Next you'll learn how to use Unity's built-in NavMesh feature and implement your own A* pathfinding system. You will then learn how to implement simple flocks and crowd's dynamics, key AI concepts. Moving on, you will learn how to implement a behavior tree through a game-focused example. Lastly, you'll combine fuzzy logic concepts with state machines and apply all the concepts in the book to build a simple tank game.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)

Evaluating the existing solutions

The Unity asset store is an excellent resource for developers. Not only are you able to purchase art, audio, and other kinds of assets, but it is also populated with a large number of plugins and frameworks. Most relevant to our purposes, there are a number of behavior tree plugins available on the asset store, ranging from free to a few hundred dollars. Most, if not all, provide some sort of GUI to make visualizing and arranging a fairly painless experience.

There are many advantages of going with an off-the-shelf solution from the asset store. Many of the frameworks include advanced functionality such as runtime (and often visual) debugging, robust APIs, serialization, and data-oriented tree support. Many even include sample leaf logic nodes to use in your game, minimizing the amount of coding you have to do to get up and running.

The previous...