Epic to Sponsor Unreal University
PepsiProgrammer writes "Epic and Nvidia are teaming up to create the first annual Unreal University, a two-day tutorial covering techniques for creating mods for the Unreal Tournament 2004 game engine. It'll be held at North Carolina State University in Raleigh, North Carolina, USA, on November 8th and 9th, 2003." With this event, the million-dollar Make Something Unreal contest, and the free Unreal Technology video tutorials, looks like Epic is pushing their engine heavily as weapon of choice for FPS modders.
Boring article. So boring that nobody's dashing to get the FP. You know, I'm really getting tired of first person shooters with no innovation.
You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
UT2K3 was released last year, I got a copy back then, the game was fun to play for a while, then it became a bit boring, so I started to look for mods, and I found some interesting mods, but none kept me playing for a long time. ...) I noticed a increased number of mods, I also noticed that the quality got higher, actually, UT2K3 is back to life for me now, one of my favorite mods is FaceOff UT2003, it has nothing to do with UT2K3 fancy SiFi setting, it's a real world combat game, something like TacOps or CS.
Later, when Epic started to promote the UT2K3 engine for mods (Something Unreal contest, releasing the engine for free
Another great mod is Deathball (created by TeamVortex who made the greatest UT mod ever, Operation Napali), this mod improves UT2K3's Bombing Run mode.
So I guess that Epic's new strategy along with the fact that UT2K3 is pretty new (not like the aged HL engine) makes UT2K3 a heaven for modders.
The IT section color scheme sucks.
"When I grow up, I'm going to Bovine University."
--Ralph Wiggum
Finally, going to 'state is getting me somewhere
I think if Epic were really serious about promoting modding their engine, they'd release some documentation for it. The only useful documentation I could find is the Unreal Wiki, provided by frustrated mod developers. That plus the source scripts for the UT2003 games is enough to get started, but only for the dedicated. A few focused and annotated source examples would go a long way, and some reference documentation would be gold. Why not put more content on the UDN technical wiki that isn't for engine licensees only?
Thanks for pointing out that site. I've been looking for more active community sites lately. Generally I find with any particular gaming scene the users of that particular game will flock to one site or another. However I have yet to find a location that's really heavy in UnrealEd modders traffic. I could use a good forum where I can talk to other designers and get my questions answered (and hopefully help out other people as well).
If you have any such forum I would greatly appreciate a heads up. I used to read PlanetUnreal's Editing forum but that place is a total joke for activity.
Also, if Wiki doesn't whett your appetite for UnrealEd Documentation, check out the Unreal Developers Network. There's no community activity, but I find it's the most technical assistance for using the editor around.
If you know of any better, by all means share!
Happy modding!
can be found here: http://udn.epicgames.com/