Book Image

Unity Multiplayer Games

By : Alan R. Stagner
Book Image

Unity Multiplayer Games

By: Alan R. Stagner

Overview of this book

Unity is a game development engine that is fully integrated with a complete set of intuitive tools and rapid workflows used to create interactive 3D content. Multiplayer games have long been a staple of video games, and online multiplayer games have seen an explosion in popularity in recent years. Unity provides a unique platform for independent developers to create the most in-demand multiplayer experiences, from relaxing social MMOs to adrenaline-pumping competitive shooters. A practical guide to writing a variety of online multiplayer games with the Unity game engine, using a multitude of networking middleware from player-hosted games to standalone dedicated servers to cloud multiplayer technology. You can create a wide variety of online games with the Unity 4 as well as Unity 3 Engine. You will learn all the skills needed to make any multiplayer game you can think of using this practical guide. We break down complex multiplayer games into basic components, for different kinds of games, whether they be large multi-user environments or small 8-player action games. You will get started by learning networking technologies for a variety of situations with a Pong game, and also host a game server and learn to connect to it.Then, we will show you how to structure your game logic to work in a multiplayer environment. We will cover how to implement client-side game logic for player-hosted games and server-side game logic for MMO-style games, as well as how to deal with network latency, unreliability, and security. You will then gain an understanding of the Photon Server while creating a star collector game; and later, the Player.IO by creating a multiplayer RTS prototype game. You will also learn using PubNub with Unity by creating a chatbox application. Unity Multiplayer Games will help you learn how to use the most popular networking middleware available for Unity, from peer-oriented setups to dedicated server technology.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
Unity Multiplayer Games
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Connecting from Unity and passing messages


Connecting to a Photon Server from Unity is very simple. You just need to specify the IP, port, and application which you want to use (in this case, we will specify PhotonAckServer as the application). Each application defined in the Photon Server configuration will run alongside each other—this lets you run a number of different server types such as master servers and game servers on a single physical machine.

Let's create a script to connect to Photon, service the connection ten times per second, and sends a test message to the server (which responds with an acknowledgement message).

First, we'll start with this:

using UnityEngine;
using System.Collections;
using ExitGames.Client.Photon;

public class PhotonAckClient : MonoBehaviour, IPhotonPeerListener
{
}

We'll add some variables to the top of the script:

public PhotonPeer peer;
private bool connected = false;

In Start, we'll connect to the server and kick off a co-routine, which services the connection...