VelcroPhysics
tiled
VelcroPhysics | tiled | |
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3 | 154 | |
657 | 10,631 | |
- | 0.7% | |
1.8 | 9.0 | |
almost 3 years ago | 1 day ago | |
C# | 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.
VelcroPhysics
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How easy is Monogame for a beginner coming from game engines?
MonoGame abstracts a lot of the rendering work and is easy to use for 2D games (I haven't tested its 3D support so far). It also provides you with a content pipeline plus audio and input handlers. All that's left for you to do is roll your own Entity Component System, physics, and game logic. If you're not interested in writing your own physics, there are libraries out there already. Additionally, if you don't want to get caught up in the details of data serialization, Json.NET is a great package for serializing data in JSON format. That makes it perfect when paired with a map editor such as Tiled, which can export to JSON.
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Are things like colliders already built-in or should I program “everything” in Monogame?
Back in my indie days, I shipped a few 2D games with the Farseer physics engine on XNA to Xbox 360 and Windows phone. It's not dead either, the project lives on as Velcro Physics.
- Jeg har COVID selvom jeg er vaccineret. AMA.
tiled
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How to build your interactive resume in 4 simple and 2 easy steps
When you decide on the high-level design of the resume, start building your map in Tiled. You can customise the map from the basic game you already have or build your one from scratch - just try and see what works best for you.
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How to build maps efficiently
A more sophisticated approach may be to use something like Tiled (https://www.mapeditor.org), but it typically takes a lot of code to to parse a Tiled map, so I wouldn’t start there. The exact needs of your game will dictate the approaches you use. Starting simple means you can make good, visible progress getting your game to work. And I’m sure that plenty of real games have shipped where the levels are just text files.
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Thirteen Potions Build Log
When I first messed with Phaser, I just used a 2D array to plop in my tiles, but that was very tedious. That's when I discovered the Tiled map editor! I was able to "paint" with my tilemap to create a map with various layers. I made a ground layer, a wall layer, an enemy layer, and a potion layer.
- Criando um jogo em Javascript em apenas 13Kb
- In Game Tilemap Editor?
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Planning to do hex crawls (maps) which tools to use?
There is also Tiled from https://www.mapeditor.org/ as a tilemap editor.
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I want to create a tilebase platform game what would be the best way to draw my map ? SFML C++
and for the map creation side there is plenty of software ! this one is nice and open source and free etc etc : https://www.mapeditor.org/
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Pokemon Plum - some in-progress maps for my gen 2 hack
PolishedMap, for use in-game. But, if you're just sketching stuff out, PolishedMap doesn't have the most convenient UI, so something quick with great features like Tiled works well
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People who play LANCER on FoundryVTT (or other VTTs), what do you do/use it terms of battle maps?
I use Tiled with this tileset I found in Pilot NET. The maps it creates are entirely form over function - no fancy art or effects unless you add them a different way - but they're very legible. Then I use Foundry's drawing tools to sketch out outlines for cover, object sizes, etc. (Here's an example of a map I made for a Train Heist combat - orange is Size 1, yellow is soft cover, purple is difficult terrain, and so on.)
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Ideal printer to print maps, handouts, pawns and such?
If you want to add grids or hexes, you’ll need to edit the image in an image editor to add those. I’d suggest looking at TileD at https://www.mapeditor.org or something along those lines.
What are some alternatives?
pymunk - Pymunk is a easy-to-use pythonic 2d physics library that can be used whenever you need 2d rigid body physics from Python
aseprite - Animated sprite editor & pixel art tool (Windows, macOS, Linux)
PhysicsExamples2D - Examples of various Unity 2D Physics components and features.
HyperLap2D - A powerful, platform-independent, visual editor for complex 2D worlds and scenes.
BEPUphysics - Pure C# 3D real time physics simulation library, now with a higher version number.
raylib - A simple and easy-to-use library to enjoy videogames programming
ai2thor - An open-source platform for Visual AI.
GDevelop - :video_game: Open-source, cross-platform game engine designed to be used by everyone.
2DFPhysics - 2D fixed-point physics for Unity (WIP).
TiledCS - TiledCS is a dotnet library for loading Tiled tilesets and maps
MonoGame.Extended - Extensions to make MonoGame more awesome
tilemap-studio - A tilemap editor for Game Boy, Color, Advance, DS, and SNES projects. Written in C++ with FLTK.