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  2. Pygame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pygame

    Following disagreements between former core developers and the repository owner, a fork known as pygame-ce (Community Edition) was created. [16] There is a regular competition, called PyWeek, to write games using Python (and usually but not necessarily, Pygame). [17] [18] [19] The community has created many tutorials for Pygame. [20] [21] [22 ...

  3. Soft-body dynamics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soft-body_dynamics

    Real-time systems generally have to use discrete collision detection, with other ad hoc ways to avoid failing to detect collisions. Detection of collisions between cloth and environmental objects with a well defined "inside" is straightforward since the system can detect unambiguously whether the cloth mesh vertices and faces are intersecting ...

  4. Collision detection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collision_detection

    Collision detection utilizes time coherence to allow even finer time steps without much increasing CPU demand, such as in air traffic control. After an inelastic collision, special states of sliding and resting can occur and, for example, the Open Dynamics Engine uses constraints to simulate them. Constraints avoid inertia and thus instability.

  5. Game-Maker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game-Maker

    Game-Maker (aka RSD Game-Maker) is an MS-DOS-based suite of game design tools, accompanied by demonstration games, produced between 1991 and 1995 by the Amherst, New Hampshire based Recreational Software Designs and sold through direct mail in the US by KD Software. [1]

  6. Sprite (computer graphics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sprite_(computer_graphics)

    In computer graphics, a sprite is a two-dimensional bitmap that is integrated into a larger scene, most often in a 2D video game. Originally, the term sprite referred to fixed-sized objects composited together, by hardware, with a background. [1] Use of the term has since become more general.

  7. GameSalad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GameSalad

    GameSalad uses a rigid-body physics simulator for handling realistic motion and collision. Users can manage and optimize how objects collide by organizing actors with tags . Users can choose to have an actor collide with a group of many other types of actors.

  8. Collision response - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collision_response

    The degree of relative kinetic energy retained after a collision, termed the restitution, is dependent on the elasticity of the bodies‟ materials.The coefficient of restitution between two given materials is modeled as the ratio [] of the relative post-collision speed of a point of contact along the contact normal, with respect to the relative pre-collision speed of the same point along the ...

  9. Game physics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game_physics

    More sophisticated physics models of creature movement and collision interactions require greater level of computing power and a more accurate simulation of solids, liquids, and hydrodynamics. The modelled articulated systems can then reproduce the effects of skeleton , muscles , tendons , and other physiological components. [ 3 ]