raycast-bouncing-bullets
ai-series-part-34
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raycast-bouncing-bullets
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Learn how to transition your Unity NavMeshAgent AI into a Ragdoll state on death with AI Series Part 39!
Raycast Shooting
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Learn how to transition your NavMeshAgent AI into a Ragdoll state on death with AI Series Part 39!
This tutorial and accompanying repository ends up being a playable zombie shooter that incorporates several previous tutorials including: * Click to Move & Chasing a Player (Part 1) * Animated NavMeshAgents (Part 3) * AI Attacking Nearby Objects (Part 6) * AI Checking Line of Sight (Part 29) * Ragdoll Models * Raycast Shooting
- I don't know how practical it is for most games, but it sure was fun to make this tutorial about implementing bouncing bullets with Unity. How do you feel about bouncing bullets? Applicable or just silly?
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Learn how to implement (from scratch!) Raycast shooting, bullet tracers, and bouncing bullets with the power of Vector3.Reflect and recursive coroutines! Full Tutorial in Comments
As always, the full project is available on GitHub!
ai-series-part-34
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Navmesh and advanced movement.
Llamacademy has a good video for setting up directional navmesh movement, which you can modify to turn into a roll. He has a lot of great videos about the navmesh.
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Isometric - Best approach to learn and create a game
You'll need some way to move the character, and I think using a navmesh is your best option. But character movement is quite different between the games you listed. Llamacademy has some of the best tutorials for using the navmesh, even if the intro is a little corny. Fallout and Diablo use click to move, but Hades uses directional movement.
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Make your NavMeshAgents Move Along Bezier Curved Paths | AI Series Part 35 | Full Tutorial in Comments
I don't think this is the best option for enforcing some kind of a turn radius for a vehicle. If you're wanting the pathfinding from the NavMesh with a calculated path you'd follow a similar pattern as I've done here but ultimately the algorithm would be different in how you enforce that turn radius. It can be done, just not exactly the same way as this is. If you're just moving an Agent with a keyboard or controller, this video would get you going there https://youtu.be/5XxNHibLRlA
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NavMeshAgent Movement with a Keyboard instead of Click-To-Move - Incrementally Move Agents with No Destination, Still Limiting Them to the NavMesh | Full Unity Tutorial in Post
Full Tutorial on YouTube
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NavMeshAgent Movement with a Keyboard instead of Click-To-Move - Incrementally Move Agents with No Destination, Still Limiting Them to the NavMesh | Full Tutorial in Comments
As always, the full project is available on GitHub!
What are some alternatives?
UnityCore - A collection of essential game systems for Unity 3D. These generic systems can be applied to any Unity project.
DotRecast - DotRecast - a port of Recast & Detour, Industry-standard navigation mesh toolset for .NET, C#, Unity3D, games, servers
Unity-Guide - Unity Engine Guide
destructible-objects - Learn how to add destructible objects into your game - for free! In this tutorial you'll learn how to destroy any individual game object with a common "replacement" technique. Clean up afterwards with a subtle fade out effect.
worldspace-health-bars - Learn how to implement Worldspace Health Bars in this tutorial repository with accompanying video tutorial.
christmas-lights - Learn how to add Christmas lights into your game, for free with this tutorial repository!
lerping-fundamentals - Lerping is one of the foundational things you need to know about in video game development! There are so many use cases for lerping it's impossible to name them all! Almost any time you want to rotate, move, or change a value over time, lerping is an option.