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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.
Game engine recreation is a type of video game engine remastering process wherein a new game engine is written from scratch as a clone of the original with the full ability to read the original game's data files.
The first game using Source 2, Dota 2, was ported over from the original Source engine. One of The Lab's minigame Robot Repair uses Source 2 engine while rest of seven uses Unity's engine. Spring: C++: C, C++, Java/JVM, Lua, Python: Yes 3D Windows, Linux, macOS: Balanced Annihilation, Zero-K: GPL-2.0-or-later: RTS, simulated events, OpenGL ...
Apache License 2.0 TypeScript/JavaScript adaptation of the Away3D engine built in Flash. Babylon.js: JavaScript, TypeScript: No Yes Yes Yes Yes Native (1.0 and 2.0) Yes Babylon, glTF, OBJ, STL [2] glTF Apache License 2.0 JavaScript framework for building 3D games with HTML 5 and WebGL. Clara.io: JavaScript, REST API: Yes Yes No Yes No Native (1 ...
Following years of Capcom using their proprietary MT Framework engine for video game development during the seventh generation of hardware, it was decided that to maximize productivity in the following generation of hardware it would be necessary to create a new development engine, now titled "Panta Rhei".
Torque 3D, version 1.2, was released as open-source software under the MIT License on September 20, 2012, and is being actively maintained, the current version being 4.0.3. [14] Originating as a successor to Torque Game Engine Advanced (TGEA), Torque 3D features PhysX support, modern shader features, an advanced deferred lighting model, as well ...
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]
Version 2 was released in May 2008 and utilized shadow maps in a forward renderer. [4] In version 2.1 the renderer was switched to a deferred renderer, making Leadwerks the second commercial game engine in the world to utilize this now-common technique (the first being the X-Ray Engine that powers the S.T.A.L.K.E.R. series of games by GSC Game ...