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Unity 2022 by Example

Unity 2022 by Example

By : Scott H. Cameron
4.9 (8)
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Unity 2022 by Example

Unity 2022 by Example

4.9 (8)
By: Scott H. Cameron

Overview of this book

Unity 2022 by Example is a complete introduction to building games in Unity following a project-based approach. You’ll be introduced to the Unity game engine and the tools available for building and customizing a game exactly the way you want it, while maintaining a good code foundation to build upon. Once you get to grips with the fundamentals of Unity game development, you'll start creating a 2D collection game and an adventure game, followed by a 3D first person shooter game. Next, you’ll explore advanced topics, such as using machine learning to create AI-based enemy behavior, virtual reality for extending the first-person game, and augmented reality for developing a farming simulation game in a real-world setting. The book will help you gain hands-on knowledge of these topics as you build projects using the latest game tool kits. You'll also learn how to commercialize your game by publishing it to a distribution platform and maintain and support it throughout its lifespan. As you progress, you’ll gain real-world knowledge and experience by taking your games from conceptual design to completion. By the end of this Unity book, you’ll have strong foundational knowledge of how to structure a Unity project that is both maintainable and extensible for commercially released games.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Introduction to Unity
3
Part 2: 2D Game Design
6
Part 3: 2D Game Design Continued
13
Part 4: 3D Game Design
17
Part 5: Enhancing and Finishing Games

Summary

This chapter walked us through the complete setup of an animated 2D player character, including importing art and setting up an animatable rig via PSD Importer, setting up IK Solvers, and creating and applying animations to the player using Mecanim.

We continued by adding movement ability from player input by using an Input Action Map asset with the new Input System, coding a simple player controller script, processing input, and changing animations based on the current player action, also using Mecanim.

In the next chapter, we’ll add a weapon for the player so that they can shoot projectiles efficiently.

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