Book Image

Game Development Projects with Unreal Engine

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

Game Development Projects with Unreal Engine

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

Overview of this book

Game development can be both a creatively fulfilling hobby and a full-time career path. It's also an exciting way to improve your C++ skills and apply them in engaging and challenging projects. Game Development Projects with Unreal Engine starts with the basic skills you'll need to get started as a game developer. The fundamentals of game design will be explained clearly and demonstrated practically with realistic exercises. You’ll then apply what you’ve learned with challenging activities. 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. In this project, you'll explore line traces, collisions, projectiles, user interface, and sound effects, combining these concepts to showcase your new skills. You'll then move on to the second project; a side-scroller game, where you'll implement concepts including animation blending, enemy AI, spawning objects, and collectibles. The final project is an FPS game, where you will cover the key concepts behind creating a multiplayer environment. By the end of this Unreal Engine 4 game development book, you'll have the confidence and knowledge to get started on your own creative UE4 projects and bring your ideas to life.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Preface

Processing Player Input

Let's think about a situation where the player presses the Jump action, which is associated with the Spacebar key, to get the player character to jump. Between the moment the player presses the Spacebar key and the moment the game makes the player character jump, quite a few things have to connect those two events.

Let's take a look at all the steps necessary that lead from one event to the other:

  1. Hardware Input: The player presses the Spacebar key. UE4 will be listening to this keypress event.
  2. The PlayerInput class: After the key is pressed or released, this class will translate that key into an action or axis. If there is an action or axis associated with that key, it will notify all classes that are listening to the action that it was just pressed, released, or updated. In this case, it will know that the Spacebar key is associated with the Jump action.
  3. The Player Controller class: This is the first class to receive these events...