I'm new to Unity3D, after several official tutorials I got some basic understanding about Unity3D. Now I would like to have fun with making my game.
I would like to have a sword cut an avatar into pieces. Like the game "Fruit Ninja", cutting fruit into pieces.
The specific effect I want: the cutting should be according to sword-cutting-angle, in other words, the breaking-pieces effect should vary according to every cut, that feels real.
My thought: since Avatar is made by Mesh Filter, if I cut the avatar by waist, into two pieces(upper body, lower body), I should use code to make two Mesh Filter to hold the two pieces.
I'm not expecting very detailed code, that could be a lot. I'm just wondering if I could get a clue about how to make this effect. Because I think "cutting avatar into piece" should be a general effect in game.
Thank you in advance :)
It's not easy as you may think...
Here you can get one approach to the solution:
it clones the object, finds a plane based on user variables, and flattens all the points on the other side of the plane onto it, then repeats this with the clone and the other side of the plane.
Other approach could come from using shaders, search for "cut away view shader".
I hope I have given you the start kick
Related
I am currently working on a 3d game in Unity, and I am working on the level design using ProBuilder. I basically created a huge cube which I "flipped normal", and a second one way smaller
which, as the other one, I flipped normal, but as soon as I crossed it while turning backward I could weirdly see through the small cube, which makes it feel unfinished. How could I fix this issue?
Normally in 3d games triangles can only be seen from one side. Usually this is not a problem because walls have some thickness. Since you clearly have paper thin walls made of only one layer of triangles this is exactly the result you should expect.
In short add the other side to your walls. The simples way is to duplicate the existing triangles and flipping them. Walls will still be paper thin of course. Later you should probably make them thicker.
I plan to take some 3D scans of real people's heads and need to put these new heads onto existing generic avatar bodies (happy to buy these if necessary) for use in some basic VR settings (for research purposes) and would like some advice as to possible (time efficient ways) to do this.
The first part, scanning, cleaning and optimizing the head scans will (I hope) be relatively straightforward but I'm unsure about how I can easily replace the avatar head.
I'm less bothered about perfection of the join (though I don't want it to look like frankenstien's monster) but more on saving time (as I'll need to do this with a lot of scans). In particular what to do about the neck and blending in the join.
I don't need facial expressions (though longer term they might be nice) though I will want to be able to rotate the neck set direction of gaze.
Ideally i'd like to replace the head in code at runtime in Unity rather than hand editing the models but I suspect this might not be possible.
If the process could ultimately be partially automated by scripting that would be even better.
Many thanks,
When you have a rigged character in Unity, you can see the bones in the hierachy. You can put anything on any bone - for example your head on the neck bone. Just make it a child.
This will move and rotate with the bone - for example in animations or motion-capture (VR).
So I am pretty sure what you want to achieve is as simple as adding the Mesh as a child to the bone.
I have a game world that's much bigger than the view port, the main character stays in the center of the view port at all times and the background layer is moved around to give the impression of the character moving. I want to make it so that the game world wraps, meaning if the the character keeps traveling either left or right they will eventually end up back at the starting position. There will be moving entities in the game world so the biggest problem I foresee is that if you go to the far right of the map you should be able to see any of the moving entities that are within the first small section of the far left of the map.
I've thought a bit about this and any solution I've come up with seems far too complicated. Like creating two identical game worlds side by side and moving them around accordingly. I live in hope that there is an elegant solution to this. Any expertise you can share would be greatly appreciated.
I'm using cocos2d on the iPhone just in case that makes any difference.
An example might be to have an x,y offset for your camera, and a multidimensional array of sprite objects.
As the player moves, the offset value changes, e.g., xMove = -1.4 and yMove = +2.6.
Then you would iterate and change the positions of all the tiles by that amount.
Next, you would identify the sprites that are too far away from the center of the screen (0,0) and re-position them to the opposite side, so they will always be visible.
This would all be done on the same scheduled 'tick' so no graphical artifacts occur.
I'm pretty surprised no one has made a wrappable tile map yet for cocos2d.
I can't give cocos2d specific advice, but I would say the most common way to do this is to create one game world, draw (parts of it) multiple times and make sure that your logic for things like collisions and AI checks for wrap-around where appropriate.
So if your player character is close to the corner of the world, you'd draw the world four times with different offsets. This needn't actually draw every single thing in the world four times any more than you would normally need to draw the entire world when only a small part of it is on-screen.
Hi Friends
I Want to make a simple gaming Application in which the user hit the car and car breaks from that point means the image get little deformed when the user hit the car image. I know everything could be possible with using of lots of images and get change when user hit that car image but i don't want to use so many images.
is there any solution for this , how can i deform the image ..sorry for my English but , here i paste a link of the game that is on flash and this is what i exactly want..
http://www.playgecogames.com/file.php?f=657&a=popup
please respond soon
thanks
You don't say if this is in 2D or 3D, or what techniques you're going to use.
If you're implementing the game using OpenGL, it's fairly straightforward. The object can be made up of a regular mesh, with the image as a texture mapped to the mesh. When the user hits the object, you just deform the mesh.
A simple method would be to take a vector in the direction of the hit, displace the nearest vertex by an amount proportional to the force of the strike, and then fan out in to deform the rest of the mesh in decreasing amounts. By deforming the mesh, the image texture will be rendered with all the dents or deformations you like.
If you want to to this without OpenGL and just straight images, you could use image resampling to simulate the effect. You have your original pristine image which is 'filtered' to make up the resulting image. At first there are no deformations so you copy the original image verbatim. Each time the user hits the object, you can add a deformation using a filter or transform within a local region of interest. This function would resample the source image in a distorted manner, causing it to look like the object is damaged.
If you look up some good books on game development, you'll find a great range of approaches to object collisions, deformations and so on.
If you know a bit about image processing technics here is the documentation for accessing the pixels of the image :
Apple Reference
You also have libraries for this such as this one :
simple-iphone-image-processing
But for what you want to do this might not be the easiest way. What I would suggest is that you divide the car into several images depending on what areas can be impacted. Then you just change the image corresponding to the damaged zone each time the car is hit.
I think you should use the cocos2d effects http://www.cocos2d-iphone.org/wiki/doku.php/prog_guide%3aeffects + multiple images. Because there are many parts which drops after the player kick the car. Like when user kick the side mirror you should change the car image with without side mirror car image.
The person that has made that flash game used around 4 images to display the car. If you want the game to be in 2d, the easiest way is to draw the car, cut it into about 4 pieces (: left side + right side (duplicate of the left side) hood and roof).
If you want to "really" deform the car you'll have to use a 3d engine like openGLES.
Id really suggest doing it in 2d :)
I suggest having a look at the cocos2d game engine. You can modify images with effects, which are applied using a virtual grid. Have a look at the effects page in their programming guide.
I'm attempting to build a Lunar Lander style game on the iPhone. I've got Cocos2D and I'm going to use Box2D. I'm wondering what the best way is to build the floor for the game. I need to be able to create both the visual aspect of the floor and the data for the physics engine.
Oh, did I mention I'm terrible at graphics editing?
I haven't used Box2D before (but I have used other 2D physics engines), so I can give you a general answer but not a Box2D-specific answer. You can easily just use a single static (stationary) Box if you want a flat plane as the floor. If you want a more complicated lunar surface (lots of craters, the sea of tranquility, whatever), you can construct it by creating a variety of different physics objects - boxes will almost always do the trick. You just want to make sure that all your boxes are static. If you do that, they won't move at all (which you don't want, of course) and they can overlap without and problems (to simulate a single surface).
Making an image to match your collision data is also easy. Effectively what you need to do is just draw a single image that more or less matches where you placed boxes. Leave any spots that don't have boxes transparent in your image. Then draw it at the bottom of the screen. No problem.
The method I ended up going with (you can see from my other questions) is to dynamically create the floor at runtime and then draw it to the screen.