Book Image

Unity 4.x Game Development by Example: Beginner's Guide - Third Edition

By : Ryan Henson Creighton
Book Image

Unity 4.x Game Development by Example: Beginner's Guide - Third Edition

By: Ryan Henson Creighton

Overview of this book

Unity is one of the biggest game engines in the world, providing the user with a range of important tools that they need to bring their ideas into reality. Beginner game developers are optimistic, passionate, and ambitious, but that ambition can be dangerous! Too often, budding indie developers and hobbyists bite off more than they can chew. Games like Angry Birds, Cut the Rope, and Fruit Ninja are fun, simple games that have delighted players and delivered big profits to their creators. This is the perfect climate for new game developers to succeed by creating simple games with Unity, starting today. This book teaches you the ins and outs of the unique Unity game engine interface. Clear and concise code examples written in both Unity Javascript and C# take you through the step-by-step process of building five small, functional games. With this understanding you can start making your own mark on the game industry! With absolutely no programming or game development experience, you will learn how to build five simple games in Unity by following step-by-step instructions, peppered with amusing analogies and anecdotes from an experienced indie developer. Following a primer on simplifying your game ideas to that single “something” that keeps players coming back for more, dive into the Unity game engine by creating a simple bat-and-ball game. From there, you'll build a complete memory game using only the Unity GUI system. After building a 2.5D mouse avoider game, you'll learn how to re-skin the project to completely change the game's theme. Incorporating everything you've learned, you'll return to complete the bat-and-ball game by adding scoring, replay flow, sound effects, and animations. Finally, in the new bonus chapter, you'll program some simple AI (Artificial Intelligence) for a tic tac toe game. "Unity 4.x Game Development by Example" is a fun and light-hearted exploration of one of the most powerful game engines on the market today. Find out what all the fuss is about by getting up to speed using this book!
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Unity 4.x Game Development by Example Beginner's Guide
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

The engine, the tool, and the all-weather tires


You may have heard people call Unity and other tools "game engines". That's almost correct. The confusion here comes from the fact that we have three distinct things, and we call them all "Unity".

When you download Unity, as you'll do in a moment, you're downloading the Unity 3D game authoring tool. To use a car analogy, the authoring tool works like your auto body shop. You use it to design and build the car's chassis, its handling, and its sweet, sweet leather interior and boss rims.

Under the hood, the authoring tool uses the Unity game engine, which is like the driving force behind your game. Unless you work out a pricy licensing deal with Unity Technologies, you are not allowed to mess around with the engine itself, but the engine is the piece that makes your car run.

When you're finished designing your game with the Unity authoring tool, your content gets bundled with the Unity game engine, and the two of them are packaged together with an extra piece that enables the game to run in a certain situation. The analogy gets weaker here, but consider tires: you can add snow tires to your car so that it can drive in the tundra, or dune buggy tires so that it can drive in the desert. In this way, you package your game content with a certain target platform in mind: PC, Mac, iOS, Android, or one of the various home video game consoles.