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Learning Stencyl 3.x Game Development: Beginner's Guide

You're reading from   Learning Stencyl 3.x Game Development: Beginner's Guide You don't need to know anything about game development or computer programming when you use the Stencyl toolkit. This book guides you through the whole process of creating a game, publishing and profiting from it.

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849695961
Length 336 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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INNES BORKWOOD INNES BORKWOOD
Author Profile Icon INNES BORKWOOD
INNES BORKWOOD
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Learning Stencyl 3.x Game Development Beginner's Guide
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Introduction FREE CHAPTER 2. Let's Make a Game! 3. Detecting Collisions 4. Creating Behaviors 5. Animation in Stencyl 6. Managing and Displaying Information 7. Polishing the Game 8. Implementing Sounds 9. Publishing and Making Money from Your Games 10. Targeting Mobile Platforms Planning, Resources, and Legal Issues Index

Time for action – enabling the Debug Drawing feature


The game file to import and load for this session is 5961_03_01.stencyl.

Stencyl makes it incredibly easy to see how collision detection is configured within our game; all we have to do is use the Enable Debug Drawing feature.

  1. On the main menu in Stencyl, select Run | Enable Debug Drawing.

  2. Test the game.

  3. Navigate the monkey around the scene and take note of where the colored lines appear around the monkey and the tiles.

  4. Close the Adobe Flash Player window.

What just happened?

We've enabled the option that displays the debug drawing feature in Stencyl. When we tested the game with debug drawing enabled, we could see that colored lines are drawn around the monkey actor and the tiles.

These lines, which are normally invisible to players of our game, are used by Stencyl to determine when collisions have occurred, that is, when the lines of any two objects intersect (or touch) each other. If we examine some of the colored lines more closely, we can...

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