Reader small image

You're reading from  Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity - Seventh Edition

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2022
Reading LevelBeginner
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781837636877
Edition7th Edition
Languages
Tools
Right arrow
Author (1)
Harrison Ferrone
Harrison Ferrone
author image
Harrison Ferrone

Harrison Ferrone is an instructional content creator for LinkedIn Learning and Pluralsight, tech editor for the Ray Wenderlich website, and used to write technical documentation on the Mixed Reality team at Microsoft. He is a graduate of the University of Colorado at Boulder and Columbia College, Chicago. After a few years as an iOS developer at small start-ups, and one Fortune 500 company, he fell into a teaching career and never looked back.
Read more about Harrison Ferrone

Right arrow

Managing player movement

When you’re deciding on how best to move your player character around your virtual world, consider what’s going to look the most realistic and not run your game into the ground with expensive computations. This is somewhat of a trade-off in most cases, and Unity is no different.

The three most common ways of moving a GameObject and their results are as follows:

  • Option A: Use a GameObject's Transform component for movement and rotation. This is the easiest solution and the one we’ll be working with first.
  • Option B: Use real-world physics by attaching a Rigidbody component to a GameObject and apply force in code. Rigidbody components add simulated real-world physics to any GameObject they are attached to. This solution relies on Unity’s physics system to do the heavy lifting, delivering a far more realistic effect. We’ll update our code to use this approach later on in this chapter to get a feel for...
lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity - Seventh Edition
Published in: Nov 2022Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781837636877

Author (1)

author image
Harrison Ferrone

Harrison Ferrone is an instructional content creator for LinkedIn Learning and Pluralsight, tech editor for the Ray Wenderlich website, and used to write technical documentation on the Mixed Reality team at Microsoft. He is a graduate of the University of Colorado at Boulder and Columbia College, Chicago. After a few years as an iOS developer at small start-ups, and one Fortune 500 company, he fell into a teaching career and never looked back.
Read more about Harrison Ferrone