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Open Wonderland (originally Project Wonderland) is an open-source toolkit written in Java for creating collaborative 3D virtual worlds. Project Wonderland had been funded by Sun Microsystems since its early development. On January 27, 2010, Sun Microsystems was acquired by Oracle [2] who decided to cease funding. [3]
MT Framework is a game engine created by Capcom. "MT" stands for "Multi-Thread", "Meta Tools" and "Multi-Target". While initially MT Framework was intended to power 2006's Dead Rising and Lost Planet: Extreme Condition only, Capcom later decided for their internal development divisions to adopt it as their default engine.
JavaScript framework for building 3D games with HTML 5 and WebGL. Clara.io: JavaScript, REST API: Yes Yes No Yes No Native (1.0 and 2.0) Yes OBJ, FBX, Blender, STL, STP OBJ, FBX, Blender, STL, Babylon.js, Three.js Freemium or commercial: Web-based freemium 3D computer graphics software developed by Exocortex, a Canadian software company ...
The Blend4Web framework leverages Blender to edit 3D scenes. Content rendering relies on WebGL, Web Audio, WebVR, and other web standards, without the use of plug-ins. [2] It is dual-licensed. The framework is distributed under the free and open source GPLv3 and, a non-free license - with the source code being hosted on GitHub. [3]
Android target binds to Java; iOS target uses Objective-C Codea: Lua: 2011 No 2D, 3D iOS: Apache 2.0 Construct: C++: 2007 JavaScript, Event System Yes 2D Windows, macOS, Wii U, HTML5 capable web browsers: Hypnospace Outlaw: Proprietary, GPL Classic version CraftStudio: C#: 2015 Lua: Yes 2D, 3D Windows, macOS, Linux: Free use: Used to create ...
libGDX is a free and open-source [3] game-development application framework [2] written in the Java programming language with some C and C++ components for performance dependent code. [4] It allows for the development of desktop and mobile games by using the same code base. [5]
Free Java implementations are software projects that implement Oracle's Java technologies and are distributed under free software licences, making them free software. Sun released most of its Java source code as free software in May 2007, so it can now almost be considered a free Java implementation. [ 1 ]
jMonkeyEngine (abbreviated JME or jME) is an open-source and cross-platform game engine for developing 3D games written in Java. [2] It can be used to write games for Windows, Linux, macOS, Raspberry Pi, Android, and iOS (currently in alpha testing).