Emerald is designed to be as lightweight as possible, while remaining a fully-featured and cross-platform game engine.
The api is simple and powerful, giving you direct access to physics, audio, graphics, game worlds, and asset loading.
--- Work in progress ---
--------------------------let my_sprite = emd.loader()
.sprite("my_sprite.png")
.unwrap();
let my_audio = emd.loader()
.sound("my_sound.wav")
.unwrap();
let entity = emd.world().spawn((Transform::from_translation((0.0, 0.0))));
let body_handle = emd.world().physics().build_body(
entity,
RigidBodyBuilder::dynamic()
);
emd.world().physics().build_collider(
body_handle,
ColliderDesc::cuboid(6.0, 6.0)
);
// You can alternatively build both the entity and body at once.
let (entity, body_handle) = emd.world()
.spawn_with_body(
(Transform::from_translation((0.0, 0.0))),
RigidBodyBuilder::dynamic()
)?;
emd.world()
.physics()
.step();
You decide when physics steps! This makes it very easy to "pause" the game without needing to alter any data.
The default method to draw the game is to draw all of the entities in the current world. However, you can write your own draw
function if you need to do more!
fn draw(&mut self, mut emd: Emerald) {
emd.graphics().begin();
emd.graphics().draw_world();
emd.graphics().render();
}
let my_sound = emd.loader().sound("sounds/my_song.ogg")?;
emd.audio().mixer("background_music")?.play_and_loop(my_sound);
Emerald uses the Entity Component System paradigm for creating, managing, and updating game entities.
Emerald uses Hecs under the hood for fast entity iteration, and a remarkably clean query Api.
More detailed features can be found in the Hecs documentation.
for (id, (sprite, mut position)) in emd.world().query::<(&Sprite, &mut Position)>().iter() {
position.x += 10.0;
}
Emerald has built in aseprite loading and rendering. Simply load in the file, then tell it which animations to play.
let mut aseprite = emd.loader().aseprite("my_sprite.aseprite").unwrap();
aseprite.play("some_aseprite_animation");
emd.world().spawn((aseprite, Position::zero()));
Alternatively, Emerald can load a sprite sheet exported from aseprite.
let mut aseprite = emd.loader()
.aseprite_with_animations("my_texture.png", "my_animation.json").unwrap();
WASM (WIP, PROBABLY BROKEN RIGHT NOW)
cargo build --target wasm32-unknown-unknown
In order to keep a clean, simple API, and avoid network requests for assets. Emerald takes the approach of packing all necessary assets into the WASM binary.
This same method can be used to pack all assets into the game binary regardless of which platform you target.
Use the pack_asset_bytes
function to load data into the engine.
fn initialize(&mut self, mut emd: Emerald) {
/// Pack all game files into WASM binary with path references
/// so that the regular file loading Api is supported.
#[cfg(target_arch = "wasm32")]
{
emd.loader()
.pack_asset_bytes(
"bunny.png",
include_bytes!(".bunny.png").to_vec()
);
}
/// We can now load texture/sprites via the normal Api,
/// regardless of which platform we're targeting.
let sprite = emd.loader()
.sprite("bunny.png")
.unwrap();
// Default transform at 0.0, 0.0
let mut transform = Transform::default();
self.count = 1000;
emd.world().spawn_batch(
(0..1000).map(|_| {
transform.translation.x += 6.0;
transform.translation.y += 1.0;
let mut s = sprite.clone();
(transform.clone(), s, Vel { x: 5.0, y: 3.0 })
})
);
}
Add following to Cargo.toml
and load assets as usual:
[package.metadata.android]
assets = "YOUR_ASSETS_DIRECTORY/"