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  • Natanael@slrpnk.net
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    1 year ago

    It also depends on how many engine unique features you used, and what optimizations you applied. It’s certainly possible, but doing it without changing any game logic will require very complicated translation layers which will likely cause performance issues. It might very well be easier to treat it as a porting and refactoring project. You might not even realize which behaviors are unique to each engine if you don’t regularly develop in multiple engines.

    • dog@suppo.fi
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      1 year ago

      This is true, and I vouch for gamedevs to first test other engines to see the differences.

      Calculating for the future is extremely important in pretty much everything.

      Also I wouldn’t say there would be performance issues, unless you somehow completely screw up coding and compiling said code.

      Projects should work on top of a bottom layer, or translation layer as it’s sometimes called; game logic calls for functions from there, instead of directly from the engine. This is also important for code security.

      _move_entity might be calling the proprietary unity_move_object with a different reg stack, but when compiled the performance should be +/- 0.

      • bane_killgrind@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        The things you are suggesting are adding complexity and therefore cost.

        It does take a higher level of expertise to adequately abstract away engine specific limitations and requirements.

        It’s again an even higher level of expertise and therefore expenditure to account for performance issues with these abstractions.

        • dog@suppo.fi
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          1 year ago

          Not untrue, but it helps to adapt your future projects if done in such a way.

          It does require more expertise, and it takes more time, thus it’d have to be the first thing done for the project, not something you do after everything’s done already.