UnrealOni
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Scope
This is not a game. It is a test, if at all.
It aims to explore Unreal engine and answer the longstanding question whether Oni can be recreated.
We will document learned knowledge in hope that it might become actual useful one day for a real project.
Test data will be uploaded and linked to. While that data is created, we will try to port it to the always most up to date, stable Unreal engine version.
Contributions
If you are also interested in Unreal you will be able to fork this project from Git, make changes and create a pull request.
For the improbable case that this test gets big, actual contributers can be added later avoiding the forking workflow.
Tools setup
- Create a Git account
- Install Visual Studio with Git, C++ for games, and Unreal Engine Installer selected (see "individual components" if necessary)
- However, Git and Unreal Installer can also be installed separately from the internet.
- Install Git LFS
- Run Git Bash/CMD and enter
git lfs install
- Since files larger than 100 MB are rejected we need the Large File Storage to store those files on a separate server. It is meant to keep the actual Git repo small.
- A git repos shouldn't get bigger than 1 GB.
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hv_v3tPuNj4
- Git is a command line tool. For those who like GUIs install the Git Desktop as well.
- Setup Git Desktop with your Git account data.
- Create a new repo
- Initialize with readme
- Git ignore: Unreal Engine
Project setup
- Open Unreal Laucher, install engine, create project in a folder that is also your later repo folder.
- In opened Unreal Editor, hit Source Control at the top controls.
- Select Git as Provider. Git path should be found automatically as well as the root of repo, user name, and email.