GameNetworkingSockets
fuse
GameNetworkingSockets | fuse | |
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35 | 21 | |
7,830 | 225 | |
0.6% | - | |
8.1 | 5.3 | |
about 1 month ago | 22 days ago | |
C++ | HTML | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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GameNetworkingSockets
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How are game servers financed
Steam does have a NAT traversal/punchthrough service too. It's apparently usable without Steam according to their README on https://github.com/ValveSoftware/GameNetworkingSockets but honestly the only easy to use implementation I know is in Facepunch.Steamworks which requires a SteamID to initialize
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Microsoft wins FTC fight to buy Activision Blizzard
Halo was mostly all about single player and early multiplayer/local multiplayer but their online netcode has sucked since Blood Gulch. Lots of games do networking horribly, I have been in gamedev making networking and I hate most of what people do. The ones that have a clean natting, based on enet style reliable UDP channels, RakNet style punch are better (RakNet was good until Facebook bought it). It has come a long way but also fallen back. Valve source netcode (on github) is probably the best and you can check it out here. They started with the best in Quake networking, then to Source.
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Steam is very good, but I do wish for more effort in the competition.
There are some general APIs that are tied to Steam, like some networking stuff (even then there's an open source library), but the devs are not required to use any of those. If the devs chose to develop exclusively for steam and use their libraries, then that's their own decision.
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I FIGURED OUT NETWORKING
Keep in mind that if you do go the GodotSteam route, there's GameNetworkingSockets from valve that doesn't have the requirement of needing Steam that you can use for releasing on other platforms. It has the same interface as the Steamworks SDK without requiring the Steamworks SDK.
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Peer to Peer online multiplayer?
Their UDP-but-connection-based game networking protocol can be used completely separetely from Steam (it also supports encryption). I think that does not include their relay networking solution, but still.. maybe it's helpful. They also have a TCP-like interface to make it easy to plug into an existing solution.
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What kind of person do I need to find to get help with this issue?
You can also use the non-Steam parts of that library in any game in case you don't just release on Steam (have a look at https://github.com/ValveSoftware/GameNetworkingSockets )
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Multiplayer game packaging
If you want to go the route of using a raw protocol and packing your messages yourself, I suggest to at least have a look at Valve's GameNetworkingSockets either for inspiration of what you might need or even to just use the library: https://github.com/ValveSoftware/GameNetworkingSockets
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does it cost money to have a small coop server?
There is early NAT piercing support in Valve's GameNetworkingSockets. Check out:
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What network messaging library do you recommend?
You can also try Valve's GameNetworkingSockets with a serialization of your choice.
- The Riftbreaker adds Steam Workshop Support, AMD FSR 2.1 support, Optimized CPU performance and more
fuse
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Castle Game Engine Roadmap
Nakama does not have shared parallelism, look at http://fuse.rupy.se for better scalability.
- Unity Tutorial
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SpaceTraders: A multiplayer game built on a free web API
While this seems focused on trading, kinda like EVE (spreadsheet MMO), I think physical action is the real attraction of 3D graphics/audio:
So I made a very scalable MMO protocol: https://github.com/tinspin/fuse
It's event based so analog movement should be compressed, which means headshot FPS are not the target audience. But it works fine with action games that take scalability into concern.
I'm curious how hard people find it to adopt. I'm guessing I need to deliver a good and open game on top of it to see adoption.
- Platform for an online multi player card game?
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Making a multiplayer server
You can tak a look at my multiplayer system if you need inspiration: https://github.com/tinspin/fuse
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3D MMO backend + client
This is the source available server: https://github.com/tinspin/fuse
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Server-Sent Events: the alternative to WebSockets you should be using
You don't need to use Event-Source to use SSE, look at how I implemented it here:
https://github.com/tinspin/fuse/blob/master/res/play.html#L1...
The XHR ready state 3 was wrongly implemented in IE7, they fixed it in IE8.
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Ask HN: Where do you hang out virtually online?
If you just want to play a multiplayer cube drop game and chat you are welcome at http://fuse.rupy.se
You can make rooms but they get the name of the user, so I guess you need to create a user with the name of the topic you're interested in! Xo
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XMPP, a Comeback Story: A Protocol for Robust, Private and Decentralized Comms
I made a better standard for this: https://github.com/tinspin/fuse
But of course it's suffering from this: https://xkcd.com/927/
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Free Multiplayer Puzzle Online
I made a multiplayer game like Dr Mario that is in alpha: http://fuse.rupy.se
What are some alternatives?
nakama - Distributed server for social and realtime games and apps.
Mirror - #1 Open Source Unity Networking Library
netcode.io - A protocol for secure client/server connections over UDP
libzt - Encrypted P2P sockets over ZeroTier
pglet - Pglet - build internal web apps quickly in the language you already know!
Game-Networking-Resources - A Curated List of Game Network Programming Resources [Moved to: https://github.com/ThusWroteNomad/GameNetworkingResources]
cinny - Yet another matrix client
Proton - Compatibility tool for Steam Play based on Wine and additional components
dom-examples - Code examples that accompany various MDN DOM and Web API documentation pages
GloSC - Tool for using the Steam-Controller as systemwide XInput controller alongside a global overlay [Moved to: https://github.com/Thracky/GlosSI]
vaku - vaku extends the vault api & cli