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Unity to make a Toolset?
Hello all,
I have a few questions about Unity and the limitations it might have in relation to a project I want to start. Essentially I have a tile mapping utility/toolset that allows users to place tiles, walls, etc in a 2D top-down view. I would like to implement this is Unity (Currently written in Java) but also be able to seamlessly move from the 2D view to a 3D view to move through and see the creation in 3D. Most of the objects would be simple primitives (mostly squares/rectangles/cuboids with some archways and whatnot occasionally). Ideally the textures on the objects would be user modifiable while in the 3D view. Are there limitations to Unity that would prevent me from doing this or make it a pain in the ass to do? (If so does anyone know of any potential solutions outside of Unity?)
Thank you for your time.
Answer by Eric5h5 · Aug 05, 2011 at 07:40 AM
Unity has very few limitations; basically you can do whatever you want, as long as you have at least some programming ability.
Answer by maikkel · Aug 05, 2011 at 09:14 AM
That won't be a problem (i assume you have good programming knowledge). Java and C# are quite similar, and Unity is VERY Flexible (if you're a good coder) and allows you to control every aspect of the game (including textures down to pixel-level) via code.
Answer by BerggreenDK · Aug 05, 2011 at 10:20 PM
I'm currently building on a complete map/level editor in Unity. The levels will be played from another Unity file afterwards.
To allow "none Unity developers" to build maps, I've decided to store every piece of level data outside Unity. Much like an assets server. This might be the longest way around the real objective, but I like the idea of having the data stored outside Unity when many people co-works on a project.
I've managed to build Load/Save routines that use storage on an ASP.NET webserver and this allows me to reuse C# both in MONO and .NET - and I can this way choose whatever storage I want. RAW binary files, ascii text, XML, SQL - anything.
Only problem so far, is that every new 3D object has to be manually imported by me, and then I have to publish a new version of the unity file. Its hosted on a webserver, so its not hard to distribute, its just a bit annoying that you cant really load FBX files into Unity at runtime.
There can be a little trouble getting the WWW and Yield function to work right, but once you get the hang of it, its rather easy too.
Regarding building tools - yes Unity is a great and fast prototype platform, I think.
The GUI objects are a bit strange for a start, but once you learn them, they are quite fast to use too.
Also notice that the Unity Editor itself is accessible by scripts, so if you want you can extend the Unity Editor with your own level-editor scripts.
Lastly, I have managed to build an asset importer. This automatically ajusts the FBX's when they are imported from Blender Exports. Such as turning animation import on and off, makeing every FBX the right scale and other strange things that happends when export/import from Blender to Unity.
Building this mapeditor has learned me a lot about how Unity works, how to read inputs, how to use the different events etc. so now the actually game is going to be rather simple. I should be able to cut'n'paste a lot of the subscripts from the editor itself (I hope).
So YES - go for it, if you think you can do it. Its great fun!
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