bracket-lib
gruid
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bracket-lib | gruid | |
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27 | 13 | |
1,447 | 80 | |
1.5% | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
2 months ago | 8 months ago | |
Rust | Go | |
MIT License | ISC License |
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.
bracket-lib
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Does anyone care about CLI/TUI games?
I think having to use a terminal is the scary part for many people. rltk/bracket-lib can be used to get a similar look and feel if that's what's important, but it is geared toward roguelikes.
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Minimal 2D library for games? I'm struggling a bit to settle on one to learn.
Maybe bracket-lib from the amethyst authors? Iām currently working through that book and find the library quite intuitive and simple to use. It started out as a toolkit for rouge-like games but has been getting more general. On that note, I recommend the hands-on-rust book which teaches rust concepts while building games with bracket-lib. As you have read the book, Iām sure you would get through the first chapters quickly.
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Bevy ECS or custom implementation?
https://github.com/amethyst/bracket-lib has a great integration with Bevy, designed for exactly this sort of thing.
- Turn-based game - architecture feedback/opinons
- libtcod use 8x8 font but scaled up to 16x16?
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How difficult could it be to make a console program that looks like this and has a game loop running on a separate thread? Any suggestions or crate recommendations are welcome!
I've been doing some experiments with terminal based games and landed on https://github.com/amethyst/bracket-lib It's not exactly terminal based in the sense that it actually runs on OpenGL by default. But that's a plus imho because dealing with the bits of the terminal window that can change outside of your control (like fonts, window resize, etc) is a giant pita. It does let you swap the backend to run on crossterm if that's what you really want to do but if what you're after is the aesthetic like I am having bracket_lib handling all that makes life so much better.
- Rendering TUI To Web
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Sharing Saturday #420
Bracket-Lib for Bevy Github
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Sharing Saturday #418
Bracket-Terminal/RLTK for Bevy Github Branch | Twitter | Patreon
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Sharing Saturday #416
bracket-lib šš» (using this now)
gruid
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RoguelikeDev Does The Complete Roguelike Tutorial - Week 1
I'll be doing the tutorial in python3 again so I don't get bogged down by language details, but I also considered trying out Go+gruid.
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Sharing Saturday #454
I started out using the Symmetric Shadow Casting algorithm provided by the RL lib I am using (https://github.com/anaseto/gruid) and soon managed to get something on the screen by using the HSV color space (https://imgur.com/kfXldLa).
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Sharing Saturday #416
Base game library is gruid , which is a game library build around grids which is absolutely perfect for rougelikes. I am also pretty into the ECS way of building games, coming from rust I have tried SPECs, Legion, and even Bevy (although bevy is a full fledge game library build around ECS).
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Sharing Saturday #352
Gruid Repository
- Gruid: a cross-platform grid-based UI framework with tcell, SDL2 and js drivers using an Elm-inspired architecture
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Sharing Saturday #351
Gruid Repository
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Trystans AsciiPanel in Go
You can try gruid. It should now be ready for use, as harmonist as been completely ported (not released a stable version yet, but the development version is playable. The library supports the terminal, SDL and the browser. I would gladly appreciate feedback on other using the library.
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Sharing Saturday #350
Gruid Repository
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Roguelike in Go Tutorial
Have you considered using gruid? Even if you don't use the UI stuff (though it has roguelike-friendly features, such as replay), you could still use the paths and rl packages, that offer several pathfinding algorithms (including A* and its optimisation for grid-based games JPS), two field of view algoritms (including the new symmetric shadow casting, recently added into libtcod too), parametrable cellular automata map generation, vault manipulation and an event queue (to schedule effects). I would gladly welcome feedback using the library.
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Sharing Saturday #346
Gruid Repository
What are some alternatives?
bevy - A refreshingly simple data-driven game engine built in Rust
Ebiten - Ebitengine - A dead simple 2D game engine for Go
Amethyst - Data-oriented and data-driven game engine written in Rust
dear-imgui-unity - Unity package for Dear ImGui
VTerminal - A new Look-and-Feel (LaF) for Java, which allows for a grid-based display of Unicode characters with custom fore/background colors, font sizes, and pseudo-shaders. Originally designed for developing Roguelike/lite games.
ECS - A templated, single-file header only Entity Component implementation.
libtcod - A collection of tools and algorithms for developing traditional roguelikes. Such as field-of-view, pathfinding, and a tile-based terminal emulator.
rust-rl - a roguelike in rust using rltk/bracket-lib
bevy_webgl2 - WebGL2 renderer plugin for Bevy game engine
Axes-Armour-Ale - A fantasy, ASCII dungeon crawler for Windows, Linux & OSX
python-tcod - A high-performance Python port of libtcod. Includes the libtcodpy module for backwards compatibility with older projects.
tile - Tile is a 2D grid engine, built with data and cache friendly ways, includes pathfinding and observers.