Tag: software

ISSUE 9: A New Dawn

Welcome to Volume 2, the 3D Horror RPG. A far more involved game design relying on everything you learned in Volume 1, and more. If you remember, in Volume 1, Issue 1, we created a 3D world in an hour. We’re about to use equally clever tricks to generate a scary 3D House…

ISSUE 6: Know your Enemy

Time to add the bad guys! Along the way we’ll be doing a bit of audio editing, some image editing and some more neat tricks with inheritance. To finish, we’ll add some new cameras you can switch through while playing using the ‘tab’ key and also get the RADAR on the HUD working. First, the audio editing. In Issue 5 we provided an engine sound you could download for the game. Time to explain how we made it…

ISSUE 5: A New Hope

It’s time for some housekeeping before the New Year! We’re going to change the design of our code completely in this Issue to support us as we venture forwards in 2011. We’ll also take some time to explain the water we added in Issue 4 and add some sounds effects along with a basic HUD.

ISSUE 2: All the World’s a Stage

In Issue 2 we will focus on getting your game’s main character (player) into the world you created in Issue 1!  In order to do this, we do need to cover some tricky concepts.  Issue 2 will be one of the most difficult issues for new developers but we encourage you to persevere, once you have understood the concepts in this Issue life will get easier!

ISSUE 1: The one hour 3D world
Panda3d Logo

All of the Issues in Volume 1 rely on something called Panda3D.  Panda3D is a 3D game engine provided completely free by the Carnegie Mellon Entertainment Technology Center.  A game engine is a Software Development Kit (SDK) that takes the pain out of the common tasks involved in game development.  For example, Panda3D provides libraries for graphics, physics, lighting, audio, keyboard/mouse/other input and so on.  You really would not want to find yourself having to write all of these routines yourself (you’d never finish a single game on your own!).  There are other game engines out there but we really like Panda3D due it’s ability to run on Windows, Linux and Mac and its support for Python: