So I have always been curious about this a a games development student at university, what game engine was Arcane Legends made in? I would really appreciate an answer from an STS representative;P
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So I have always been curious about this a a games development student at university, what game engine was Arcane Legends made in? I would really appreciate an answer from an STS representative;P
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YouTube Channel: www.youtube.com/marsu4u
They have their own engine called Spacetime Engine. I'm not sure which coding language was used to write it.
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Their own engine, very impressive. It seems like a neat little engine. Just like the OP, I too have an interest in these things, mostly as a hobbyist.
Prolly code C++ and 3D modelling 3DS Max.
Back in my day....... I was taught pascal and cobol programming languages T.T
My lecturer was a die hard pascal fanboy. His famous words where... C++ will never catch on!
Last edited by Terminhater; 09-08-2016 at 03:22 AM.
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Really curious waiting for Gary, Vroom or someone to answer lol :P Keep this thread alive till they see it
YouTube Channel: www.youtube.com/marsu4u
C++/ Open GL.
Originally built by Asommers and Futumsh, who were principle engineers on Star Wars: Galaxies before Spacetime.
Futumsh's tech history goes all the way back to Ultima Online!
just had to add there is lots of history in this stuidios!!! sts is more then i expected! google knows everything yes gerry even what you ate last night!
Then i'm new to this all lol. I follow a IT education. We're currently learning the basics of making our own database. We need learn how we're gonna make one on our own in a period of 20 weeks.
Last edited by Carapace; 09-08-2016 at 03:20 PM.
I went to Fullsail University's Bachelor Game Design and Development program. It was blistering fast, 40 hours a week of school before projects and homework and we only had a week off for winter break and spring I think? I graduated in under 2 years. I learned how to code C/C++ in a month and a half and made my first game in four months. It was an awesome program, but not for everyone. Not a lot of time for partying, and many sleepless nights studying and working on projects. I almost failed AI!
My final project I worked with four other classmates and we all went on to have careers in the industry. This was our final project: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wdEBQ045lvs
We made it from scratch in about 5 months from the ground up. The Engine guy now works at Microsoft on XBOX, another went to Microsoft for tool ssupport, one went on to work on Silent Hill over in CA before leaving the industry to work in health care, another went to work on SWTOR, and I now work at Spacetime after working on games like The Incredible Hulk, Call of Duty (360/PS3 port), Thor (Wii/3DS), Inertia (on iOS/Android) and some other titles along the way. Been at Spacetime almost 5 years now, and working in Game Dev for almost 10
Last edited by Carapace; 09-08-2016 at 04:05 PM.
YouTube Channel: www.youtube.com/marsu4u
Would it by any chance be possible for you to put up an screenshot if the interface, im very curious
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If they taught game development when I was in school, I may have considered it. I went to the University of Buffalo for electrical engineering. It was in the early days of cellular communcations, and I found that area so fascinating.
Also, the Internet was just getting started, and back then only engineering and comp sci students were online. Most of the rest of society had no idea what the Internet was. I got my first email address my junior year, and I can remember telling family and friends about it and getting responses like "Really? You can do that through a computer? You mean like a fax?" It wasn't until 3-4 years later when America Online became a big thing that everyone started using the Internet.
After graduation I ended up getting into music production, and today I own a music production company.
As for computer programming, I started when I was 8 years old. My first computer was a Commodore Vic-20 and I got a subscription to Run Magazine, which was a magazine devoted to Basic programming. Later in high school I took classes in Basic and Pascal, and then in college learned Assumbly language, Fortran, Cobol and C++, and on my own I learned Visual Basic. I still use Visual Basic today, as it is wonderful for data manipulation of large amounts of music metadata.
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