this post was submitted on 22 Apr 2025
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games

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Tabletop, DnD, board games, and minecraft. Also Animal Crossing.

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[–] grandepequeno@hexbear.net 7 points 4 days ago (2 children)

That's possible? You can mix game engines?

[–] Le_Wokisme@hexbear.net 11 points 4 days ago

all the gameplay logic runs one one thing and all the graphics instructions get interpreted into something the new engine understands

[–] codexarcanum@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 4 days ago

Most game engines are actually composed of several subsystems working together. Commonly you'll have a renderer (translates art and geometry into 3D graphics), a sound system (managing channels, dynamic music cues, sound effects), physics and collision (given positions and velocities of things figure out how those should change), scripting, net code for multiplayer, and then each game will have various specific subsystems.

Like Oblivion has a massive system for managing dialogue: what NPCs say, what responses you have, how stats and items influence that, what audio voice clips are attached to each written line. All of that could still work with basically no changes.