Book Image

Unity Virtual Reality Projects - Second Edition

By : Jonathan Linowes
Book Image

Unity Virtual Reality Projects - Second Edition

By: Jonathan Linowes

Overview of this book

Unity has become the leading platform for building virtual reality games, applications, and experiences for this new generation of consumer VR devices. Unity Virtual Reality Projects walks you through a series of hands-on tutorials and in-depth discussions on using the Unity game engine to develop VR applications. With its practical and project-based approach, this book will get you up to speed with the specifics of VR development in Unity. You will learn how to use Unity to develop VR applications that can be experienced with devices such as Oculus, Daydream, and Vive. Among the many topics and projects, you will explore gaze-based versus hand-controller input, world space UI canvases, locomotion and teleportation, software design patterns, 360-degree media, timeline animation, and multiplayer networking. You will learn about the Unity 3D game engine via the interactive Unity Editor, and you will also learn about C# programming. By the end of the book, you will be fully equipped to develop rich, interactive VR experiences using Unity.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

The reticle cursor

A variant of the visor HUD that is essential in first-person shooter games is a reticle or crosshair cursor. The analogy here is that you're looking through a gun-sight or an eyepiece (rather than a visor) and your head movement is moving in unison with the gun or turret itself. You can do this with a regular game object (for example, Quad + texture image), but this chapter is about UI. So, let's use our canvas, as follows:

  1. Find your Main Camera object in the Hierarchy panel as we did previously.
  2. From the Project panel, drag the DefaultCanvas prefab onto the camera object so that it becomes a child of the camera. Name it ReticleCursor.
  3. Set the Rect Transform component's Pos X, Pos Y, Pos Z to (0, 0, 1).
  4. Delete its child objects: Image and Text. This will break the prefab association; that's OK.
  5. Add a raw image child by selecting it from...