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Swift Game Development

Swift Game Development

By : Siddharth Shekar, Haney
2.7 (3)
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Swift Game Development

Swift Game Development

2.7 (3)
By: Siddharth Shekar, Haney

Overview of this book

Swift is the perfect choice for game development. Developers are intrigued by Swift and want to make use of new features to develop their best games yet. Packed with best practices and easy-to-use examples, this book leads you step by step through the development of your first Swift game. The book starts by introducing Swift's best features – including its new ones for game development. Using SpriteKit, you will learn how to animate sprites and textures. Along the way, you will master physics, animations, and collision effects and how to build the UI aspects of a game. You will then work on creating a 3D game using the SceneKit framework. Further, we will look at how to add monetization and integrate Game Center. With iOS 12, we see the introduction of ARKit 2.0. This new version allows us to integrate shared experiences such as multiplayer augmented reality and persistent AR that is tied to a specific location so that the same information can be replicated on all connected devices. In the next section, we will dive into creating Augmented Reality games using SpriteKit and SceneKit. Then, finally, we will see how to create a Multipeer AR project to connect two devices, and send and receive data back and forth between those devices in real time. By the end of this book, you will be able to create your own iOS games using Swift and publish them on the iOS App Store.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
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19
Index

Project setup and detecting a plane

The first thing that we have to do, before we even set up the project, is change some settings and detect a plane so that our game object will have a plane to start on. In the 3D game in Chapter 11, Introduction to SceneKit, we created the ground on which the player character was placed and can jump from. When we make an AR game, we first need to detect a physical real-world plane on which we want our game objects to be placed.

ARKit for SceneKit provides a specific function that does just that. In fact, there are three functions. The first one is didAddAnchor, then we have didUpdateAnchor, and finally we have didDeletAnchor:

    func renderer(_ renderer: SCNSceneRenderer, didAdd node: SCNNode, for anchor: ARAnchor) {

}
    func renderer(_ renderer: SCNSceneRenderer, didUpdate node: SCNNode, for anchor: ARAnchor) {

}
    func renderer(_ renderer: SCNSceneRenderer, didDelete node: SCNNode, for anchor: ARAnchor) {

}

DidAddAnchor checks whether a new anchor...

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