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Mastering Unity 2D Game  Development

You're reading from   Mastering Unity 2D Game Development Using Unity 5 to develop a retro RPG

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786463456
Length 506 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Simon Jackson Simon Jackson
Author Profile Icon Simon Jackson
Simon Jackson
Dr. Ashley Godbold Dr. Ashley Godbold
Author Profile Icon Dr. Ashley Godbold
Dr. Ashley Godbold
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Overview 2. Building Your Project and Character FREE CHAPTER 3. Getting Animated 4. The Town View 5. Working with Unitys UI System 6. NPCs and Interactions 7. The World Map 8. Encountering Enemies and Running Away 9. Getting Ready to Fight 10. The Battle Begins 11. Shopping for Items 12. Sound and Music 13. Putting a Bow on It 14. Deployment and Beyond

Working with settings

Saving data is always important, especially in games where you need to keep track of the player's progress or at the very least maintain a track record of scores, plays, and other important data.

Within Unity, there is only one method of storing data natively, and that is PlayerPrefs. It is very simple to use and very flexible, although it does have a hard limit of 1 MB of storage for the web player. It is possible to serialize data into PlayerPrefs (and some developers do this), but generally if you need to serialize, most developers build their own system.

Using PlayerPrefs

PlayerPrefs is simply a key dictionary to store individual variables as a key in the Unity runtime data store. On its own, it has to read each and every scene at runtime, which is why most games use a static class to keep the state stored in PlayerPrefs and only use it between scenes for scene-specific configuration.

Using PlayerPrefs is very easy and simple. The process is the same as any other...

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