Fyrox
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Fyrox | LearnOpenGL | |
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62 | 624 | |
7,187 | 10,240 | |
2.0% | - | |
9.9 | 3.7 | |
about 14 hours ago | 8 days ago | |
Rust | C++ | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Fyrox
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Rust Game Physics Engines: PhysX, Rapier, XPBD & Others
Some other Rust game engines ship with their own physics engine. Fyrox, for example, has advanced 2D/3D physics, supporting rigid bodies, joints, ray casting and more. Godot too, which has community-led Rust bindings also has an in-built physics engine as well as a Godot-native extension using the Jolt physics engine. In fact, which is reported to be more performant than the official physics engine.
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Alternative Game Engines for Marooned Unity Developers
checkout https://fyrox.rs
- List of Unity alternatives
- Fyrox - A feature-rich game engine built in Rust.
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“This Is a Disaster:” Game Developers Scramble to Deal with Unity’s New Fees
I would say Bevy isn't really similar to Unity. Something like Fyrox - https://fyrox.rs/ - would be more similar. Bevy is more low level and lacks an editor (as of now, it's planned)
- Fyrox Game Engine 0.31 is Out with Major Improvements in its Editor
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Help me find my game engine!
Fyrox might be an option, but for what you're looking (simple game logic, low performance concerns, desire for complete editor) for I'd probably choose Godot over it.
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What is Rust's potential in game development?
Besides Bevy there’s also Fyrox Engine that looks very promising. https://fyrox.rs/
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NANOVOID Devlog #1: Lua Scripting
We have our own engine. There aren't really full engines available in the Rust ecosystem. Bevy attempts to fill this, but it's far from being feature complete. There's also https://fyrox.rs/, but that's also work in progress. There's also https://rend3.rs/ which is just a 3d renderer, so you'll need to build the rest of the engine yourself.
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I was wrong about rust ... The convenience of cargo being the main reason... I'm going all in on rust now, I leave cpp with a heavy heart.
/uj they're probably talking about Fyrox https://github.com/FyroxEngine/Fyrox
LearnOpenGL
- Learn OpenGL eBook
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LearnD3D11, a guide aimed at anyone trying to learn Direct3D11
Also recommended: LearnOpenGL [1] and Vulkan Guide [2]
[1]: https://learnopengl.com/
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Making Small Games, Which Is Fun in Itself
I want to begin game development as a hobby, but I'm unsure where to start. I did follow through https://learnopengl.com/ a few years ago, and while it was a very interesting experience, I imagine I would need to use an existing engine to be productive.
Do you recommend any books and tutorials aimed at experienced programmers with 0 knowledge of game development/design?
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Is there space in this field for extreme cases like mine ?
- Game development - Unity3D project based learning in C#: https://learn.unity.com/ - Graphics - There was another user on r/GraphicsProgramming the other day (who teaches Computer Graphics at his university) that linked their lecture series for the entry year of their course here: https://tamats.com/learn/realtime-graphics/ - Project based learning: https://github.com/ssloy/tinyrenderer/wiki - Rendering API tutorials: https://vulkan-tutorial.com/, https://learnopengl.com/
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Where do I start to learn C++ for a game development
If u want to make 3D game, you'll probably want to learn some 3D shader graphic stuff. OpenGL is a good start. https://learnopengl.com
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Ask HN: Learn Graphics Programming, Recommendations?
LearnOpenGl.com
Possibly a smidge outdated.
Goes from blank window to rendering 3d meshes with advanced lighting techniques (HDR, SSAO and more).
Heped me understand shader pipeline, so I recommend it.
https://learnopengl.com
- I’m Bored AF!
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Looking to get started
and then https://learnopengl.com/
- Ajutor in privinta incercarii a face un joc
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Is a bounding volume a mesh? (for visualization)
I'm reading the guest article about frustum culling on learnopengl.com and there's a video demonstrating how it works and for debug purposes they have a bunch of spheres turning red or green which I assume means they're being culled or not so my question is if I wanted to do this do I have to make a mesh for whatever bounding volume shape or is there a specific method for something like this?
What are some alternatives?
bevy - A refreshingly simple data-driven game engine built in Rust
raylib - A simple and easy-to-use library to enjoy videogames programming
Godot - Godot Engine – Multi-platform 2D and 3D game engine
bgfx - Cross-platform, graphics API agnostic, "Bring Your Own Engine/Framework" style rendering library.
wgpu - Cross-platform, safe, pure-rust graphics api.
imgui - Dear ImGui: Bloat-free Graphical User interface for C++ with minimal dependencies
macroquad - Cross-platform game engine in Rust.
sokol - minimal cross-platform standalone C headers
three-d - 2D/3D renderer - makes it simple to draw stuff across platforms (including web)
gdnative - Rust bindings for Godot 3
SFML - Simple and Fast Multimedia Library