2D Character Tutorial UT2k4

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<h2>How 2D-Characters are set up</h2>
<h2>How 2D-Characters are set up</h2>
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<p>The 2D-Characters in Moviesandbox are basically a set of textures that are drawn on the screen. The angle from which you look at the character and the state the character is in (i.e. walking, idling, animating) dfine the texture that is displayed.</p>
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<p>The 2D-Characters in Moviesandbox are basically a set of textures that are drawn on the screen. The angle from which you look at the character, the characters own rotation and the state the character is in (i.e. walking, idling, animating) dfine the texture that is displayed.</p>
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<p>It works pretty much like the character display in the very first version of the game DOOM from idSoftware[http://www.idsoftware.com]. <br>
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Right now, Moviesandbox treats every 2D-Character as a 4-sided object, so you would need 4 textures for a fully functioning character.
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Here's an example of what an Idle texture from the front might look like.<br>
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[[Image:2DIdleFront.jpg]][[Image:2DIdleSide.jpg]]<br>
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<b>Note that the textures are moving. They can be sequences of textures, as long as you follow the naming convention.</b><br>
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But more to that later.
<h2>Basic Data structure</h2>
<h2>Basic Data structure</h2>

Revision as of 19:12, 9 April 2006

Introduction

in this document, we will show you how to create your 2D-Character and set it up so it works inside Moviesandbox. This Tutorial requires knowledge of the Unreal Editor and Moviesandbox, so please be sure you feel familiar with those tools before creating your own characters. For beginner tutorials, go visit the Tutorials page.

How 2D-Characters are set up

The 2D-Characters in Moviesandbox are basically a set of textures that are drawn on the screen. The angle from which you look at the character, the characters own rotation and the state the character is in (i.e. walking, idling, animating) dfine the texture that is displayed.

It works pretty much like the character display in the very first version of the game DOOM from idSoftware[1].
Right now, Moviesandbox treats every 2D-Character as a 4-sided object, so you would need 4 textures for a fully functioning character. Here's an example of what an Idle texture from the front might look like.
Image:2DIdleFront.jpgImage:2DIdleSide.jpg
Note that the textures are moving. They can be sequences of textures, as long as you follow the naming convention.
But more to that later.

Basic Data structure

Basic Data structure for 2D-Characters is the following:

<p>filename_XAAA_A00 whereas X is the angle of the texture (Front,Back,Left,Right) and AAA is the animation name (Walk,Idle,Anim).

Examples:
Garry_FWlk_A00 is the character Garry, depicting the front part of the character while walking.
Tobias_LIdl_A00 is the character Tobias, depicting the Left Side of the character while standing.

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