![]() Besides the name change, the primary difference is the stage at which the team might take interest in a developer rather than waiting for a Unity-based game to prove popular, Unity Games will be open to helping early stage/conceptual games find their footing. Union existed to find the best examples of Unity games, and help them get onto platforms they probably otherwise wouldn’t, or that Unity didn’t officially support for most developers - things like the Roku box, or Samsung’s Tizen platform. ![]() Unity Gamesīack in last year, Unity launched a publishing arm called Union. Imagine being able to advertise your game with a level from your game, loaded on-the-fly. Helgason tells me that the ads will likely be somewhat simple at first, but will eventually evolve to support much of what the Unity Engine as a whole supports. So far, Unity says they’ve partnered with around a dozen game publishers (Glu, Supercell, and Kabam, among others) to fill their ad inventory. Made a sequel and want to promote it? Use the web interface to change all the ads to one supporting your new game. Just launched your game and want it to be an ad-less experience until it proves popular? Just keep all the ads disabled, then check the box in the web interface when you’re ready. They can then control the ads via a web interface. Once integrated, Unity developers set the points in their game where they want full-screen, interstitial ads to be allowed to pop up. Before you start dreaming of a drop-in solution for game saves in the cloud (à la Steam Cloud), Unity Cloud is a built-in advertising/cross-promotion solution for Unity developers to tie into their mobile/tablet games. Helgason also announced a new tool that they’re calling Unity Cloud. If you’ve played Angry Birds, or Limbo, or Rolando, or Tiny Wings, you’ve seen Box2D in action. Unity has also integrated the open-source and super popular Box2D physics engine, which powers the physics in so many 2D mobile games that it’s crazy. So they hired him to lead the charge into 2D.) They fell in love with the work of a third-party developer, Juha Kiili, who’d built a bunch of 2D add-on tools for the community. (Interesting side note: Helgason tells me that the biggest challenge in finally supporting 2D was figuring out a good workflow - an interface for 2D that worked well and still felt like Unity. It’s getting a built-in sprite animation editor, and a dedicated 2D renderer with things like layers/depth and parallax scrolling. To get all technical for the 2D game geeks out there: it’s getting a proper, drag-and-drop sprite importer, and built-in texture atlasing (so you can cram a bunch of sprites - like, say, the individual frames of an animation - into one mapped image for the sake of performance). With the release of Unity 4.3 this fall, Unity will be picking up a whole new 2D workflow and set of tools, effectively letting it double as a proper 2D game engine. When they realized that as many as half of the Unity Games hitting the App Store were 2D games, though, Unity figured it was time to embrace it. You were almost working against Unity as much as you were working with it. You had to lock the camera to one plane, force perspective, and install a bunch of third-party extensions for 2D art management… and even then, it always felt like you were forcing a 2D game into a 3D game engine. It’s just always been a bit of a hacked-together process. You could! Rovio’s Angry Birds sequel Bad Piggies was built on Unity, for example. Now, the news that Unity will officially support 2D game development doesn’t mean that you couldn’t build 2D games with Unity before. ![]() That’s just shy of 10 million installs per day. In terms of popularity, Unity says they’re seeing 100 Unity-based apps installed on mobile handsets per second. ![]() It currently supports iPhone, Android, BlackBerry 10, Windows/Windows Phone, OS X, Linux, their browser-based web player, and all of the current/next-gen consoles (though you’d still need to work with each console maker for the rights to publish on those). If you’re unfamiliar with Unity, here are the basics: You build your game in Unity’s editor, and can then publish it to many, many platforms with minimal modification. Unity, the increasingly popular “build once, deploy anywhere” 3D game engine, is going 2D.Īt the company’s UNITE conference in Vancouver this morning, CEO David Helgason announced three things: official support for 2D game development, a built-in advertising service called Unity Cloud, and a new game publishing arm of the company, Unity Games.
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