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Mastering Unity 2D game development

You're reading from   Mastering Unity 2D game development Mastering Unity 2D Game Development will give your game development skills a boost and help you begin creating and building an RPG with Unity 2D game framework

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781849697347
Length 474 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Simon Jackson Simon Jackson
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Simon Jackson
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Overview FREE CHAPTER 2. Building a Character 3. Getting Animated 4. The Game World 5. NPCs and Interactions 6. The Big Wild World 7. Encountering Enemies and Running Away 8. Shopping for Weapons 9. Getting Ready to Fight 10. Fight and Gain XP 11. Onward Wary Traveler 12. Deployment and Beyond A. Additional Resources Index

Sensors


Using the Mecanim state machine in this way is very powerful and just having scripts update the parameters of the state machine through input (user taps a key, or scene loads) is simple enough. However, if you want reactive AI, you might want to think about sensors.

Sensors are effectively the AI's eyes and ears and whatever else it wants to use to detect action within a scene (even if it's an alarm or trip wire). Generally, they are self-contained components that look after themselves and inform whatever they are attached to. They can be as complex or as simple as you need them to be.

A basic sensor might be an empty game object with a trigger collider (the trip wire), which tells the enemy state machine that the player has come into view. Alternatively, you could use ray casting (yes, even in 2D) to check whether the target is in view.

One of the best examples of a sensor I've seen is a wandering game object with a sphere trigger that wanders round the screen to represent the point...

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