Book Image

Elevating Game Experiences with Unreal Engine 5 - Second Edition

By : Gonçalo Marques, Devin Sherry, David Pereira, Hammad Fozi
Book Image

Elevating Game Experiences with Unreal Engine 5 - Second Edition

By: Gonçalo Marques, Devin Sherry, David Pereira, Hammad Fozi

Overview of this book

Immerse yourself in the Unreal game projects with this book, written by four highly experienced industry professionals with many years of combined experience with Unreal Engine. Elevating Game Experiences with Unreal Engine 5 will walk you through the latest version of Unreal Engine by helping you get hands-on with the game creation projects. The book starts with an introduction to the Unreal Editor and key concepts such as actors, blueprints, animations, inheritance, and player input. You'll then move on to the first of three projects, building a dodgeball game, where you'll learn the concepts of line traces, collisions, projectiles, user interface, and sound effects. You’ll also discover how to combine these concepts to showcase your new skills. The second project, a side-scroller game, will help you implement concepts such as animation blending, enemy AI, spawning objects, and collectibles. And finally, you'll cover the key concepts in creating a multiplayer environment as you work on the third project, an FPS game. By the end of this Unreal Engine book, you'll have a broad understanding of how to use the tools that the game engine provides to start building your own games.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)

Summary

In this chapter, you learned about the importance of VFX and SFX in the world of game development. Using a combination of C++ code and notifies, you were able to bring gameplay functionality to the player projectile and the enemy character colliding, as well as a layer of polish to this functionality by adding VFX and SFX. On top of this, you learned about how objects are spawned and destroyed in UE5.

Moreover, you learned about how Animation Montages are played, both from Blueprints and through C++. By migrating the logic of playing the Throw Animation Montage from Blueprint to C++, you learned how both methods work and how to use both implementations for your game.

By adding a new Animation Notify using C++, you were able to add this notify to the Throw Animation Montage, which allows the player to spawn the player projectile you created in the previous chapter. By using the UWorld->SpawnActor() function and adding a new socket to the player skeleton, you were able...