geckos.io
matchbox
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geckos.io | matchbox | |
---|---|---|
5 | 8 | |
1,289 | 813 | |
2.1% | - | |
7.0 | 8.7 | |
5 months ago | 20 days ago | |
TypeScript | Rust | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
geckos.io
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How to properly scale an IO game?
First, I would try exchange Socket.io over Geckos - https://github.com/geckosio/geckos.io.
- I need a new framework for my game.
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Show HN: Hathora – Multiplayer Game Development Made Easy
I agree the scope is massive. I think a lot of people struggle with figuring out how to even get started with multiplayer dev, and I hope Hathora can be a useful tool for them.
Thanks for linking matchbox - I've been looking into https://github.com/geckosio/geckos.io as a way to integrate WebRTC into Hathora
- I spent the past year building a multiplayer web game in Typescript/Node
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Show HN: PSX Party – Online Multiplayer Playstation 1 Emulator Using WebRTC
https://github.com/pion/datachannel looks great! Thank you for sharing your project with the open source community.
I just starred it, it does seem like it'd alleviate a some of the pain. Another similar (more end to end) project I had come across is: geckos.io. This previous HN thread[1] discusses some of the (at least perceived) difficulty with using WebRTC as a "WebSockets but UDP" solution.
I'm not sure I follow the concern about congestion control. UDP doesn't have it either, presumably since if you're building an application that requires such latency sensitivity, you don't mind rolling your own congestion control algorithm that makes most sense given your application's specific needs, right? Pretty much all FPS games do this, as far as I understand.
[0] https://github.com/geckosio/geckos.io
matchbox
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Announcing lavagna v2, a collaborative blackboard made with bevy and WebRTC
The “collaboration” feature is achieved thanks to matchbox crate, a peer-to-peer WebRTC networking library.
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IronBoy: High accuracy GameBoy emulator written in Rust and available in the browser via WASM
Consider using https://github.com/johanhelsing/matchbox to help with the WebRTC problem, I hear good things about it
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Show HN: Hathora – Multiplayer Game Development Made Easy
https://github.com/johanhelsing/matchbox
Even then, you'd cover only some very specific use-cases of multiplayer game-making.
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[Showcase] wasm-peers: easy-to-use WebRTC networking wrapper for WASM
That's the approach taken by the matchbox project, and it's done pretty well.
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Bevy 0.6
In theory, it should also be possible to support browser-native crossplay that way. I did some work on supporting that, but I'm currently stuck on an issue with webrtc-rs.
What are some alternatives?
React-Discord-Clone - Discord Clone using React, Node, Express, Socket-IO and Mysql
bevy_egui - This crate provides an Egui integration for the Bevy game engine. 🇺🇦 Please support the Ukrainian army: https://savelife.in.ua/en/
ggpo - Good Game, Peace Out Rollback Network SDK
Yew-WebRTC-Chat - A simple WebRTC chat made with Yew
webtransport - WebTransport is a web API for flexible data transport
bevy - A refreshingly simple data-driven game engine built in Rust
SkyOffice - Immersive virtual office built with Phaser, React, Redux, PeerJS, and Colyseus.
bevy-website - The source files for the official Bevy website
datagram - In-progress version of draft-ietf-quic-datagram
bevy_ggrs - Bevy plugin for the GGRS P2P rollback networking library.
joystick-mapper - A Rust library to map joystick input to keyboard, mouse and custom actions
wasm-peers - Easy-to-use wrapper for WebRTC DataChannels peer-to-peer connections written in Rust and compiling to WASM.