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

Progress Bars

One of the ways that video games can represent character stats such as health, stamina, and so on is through Progress Bars, which are what we'll use to communicate to the player how much health their character has. Progress Bars are essentially a shape, usually rectangular, that can be filled and emptied in order to show the player how a specific stat is progressing. If you want to show the player that their character's health is only half its maximum value, you could do this by showing the Progress Bar as half full. This is exactly what we'll be doing in this section. This Progress Bar will be the only element in our Dodgeball game's HUD.

In order to create this Health Bar, we'll first need to create our HUD Widget. Open the editor, go to the ThirdPersonCPP -> Blueprints directory inside the Content Browser, and right-click and create a new Widget Blueprint class of the User Interface category. Name this new Widget Blueprint BP_HUDWidget...