Original author(s) | Ray Gresko |
---|---|
Developer(s) | LucasArts |
Written in | C[1] |
Operating system | MS-DOS, Mac OS[1]Sony PlayStation[2] |
Type | Game engine |
License | Proprietary |
Jedi is a game engine developed primarily by Ray Gresko for LucasArts.[3] It is very similar to the Build engine used in Duke Nukem 3D. While not a true 3D engine, it supported a three-dimensional environment with no limitations in the 3rd dimension (Z). In Doom, environments or levels were limited to existing in the X-Y plane only – levels were laid out two-dimensionally: while floor and ceiling heights could differ, areas could not overlap vertically. The Jedi Engine had support for areas or rooms (called "sectors") on top of one another, a trait that it shared with the Build engine.[2] In the Dark Forces revision of the engine, the renderer could not display two rooms situated on top of each other simultaneously. This capability was added for Outlaws.[4]
The Jedi Engine also included the ability to jump and crouch, the ability to look up and down,[3] and atmospheric effects (achieved by careful manipulation of 256-color palette files).[5] The engine is limited in its rendering capabilities, however, and used two-dimensional sprites (pre-rendered in different angles) for most of its object graphics.[4] Other LucasArts techniques such as the iMuse sound system were incorporated.[1]
Its lifetime was short-lived, being used in two titles, Star Wars and Outlaws.[6] The sequel to Dark Forces, Jedi Knight, used the Sith engine.
There have been attempts of open source game engine recreations based on reverse engineering the original source code.[7]
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jedi (game engine).
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