Another good lesson about why we should trust only FOSS ecosystems

  • @dan@upvote.au
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    710 months ago

    Godot, being open source

    This is the key thing IMO. If they ever do anything like try to make it a paid framework with huge fees, or just move in a direction the community disagrees with, the existing open source code remains open source and someone can just fork it.

    • @vexikron@lemmy.zip
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      10 months ago

      Ding ding ding, winner winner chicken dinner.

      Sure if you are a bigger entity and have more money to throw around, there are other engines that’ll probably be a much better fit.

      If youre a broke ass indie dev, I am not really seeing a better choice than Godot right now, as youre not gonna be able to afford a more expensive engine without /usually/ pulling some kind of asset flip scam type thing.

      Sure there are some very good more niche 2D only development engines, but even with a lot of them youve still got some kind of liscensing to deal with.

      That basically leaves Unity and … OGRE, as far as I am aware for possibly good choices for a 3D game.

      Unity is currently self destructing, and OGRE, at least as far as I have tried, is pretty hard to get a native dev environment working on linux. Maybe I missed something or got confused, but I kept running into error after error trying to set up its more advanced features, which seem to require windows specific dependencies.

      I guess you could run it in a VM but that seems basically insane, and even if I was to set up a dedicated Windows machine just to develop on OGRE, it is far more clumsy to work with than Godot.