I Made a Game in Unreal in 14 Days... (No Experience)

2024 ж. 9 Мам.
916 757 Рет қаралды

So I decided to start learning Unreal Engine and start making my own video game... and future games :)
Here's a list of the channels and tutorials I found to be most helpful in getting to where I got to:
​⁠@thomasbrush
​⁠@UnrealSensei
​⁠@GorkaGames
​⁠@PrismaticaDev
​⁠@promptmuse
First, a mindset, realistic perspective video from Thomas Brush, (the title says game studio, but that can be a solo dev)
• Start A Game Studio In...
If you're completely new, start with Unreal Sensei's video:
• Unreal Engine 5 Beginn...
You might want to also watch his update on his landscape brush (more important than you'd think):
• Unreal Engine 5 Landsc...
Then, make Gorka's first game, this was a needle mover for me, really makes you start understanding how blueprints work and it feels amazing to actually make a video game.
• How to Make Your First...
Prompt Muse has an amazing workflow video showing how she downloads characters, uses Accurig to rig them, uses Cascadeur to make animations, and then importing that all into unreal. It's a ton and somehow under 30 minutes (Careful on choosing the skeletal mesh you choose when you bring it into Unreal, I'm pretty sure you're supposed to select the UE4 one) P.S I think it's probably best practice to learn manual rigging and modeling aswell:
• How To Easily Animate ...
Here's PrismaticaDev's Interactive Plugin announcement video! It's what I want to dive into next on my own so I can get a beautiful interactive world, he's also got a bunch of amazingly useful videos about physics, wind, lighting and a bunch of other stuff:
• My plugin is OUT NOW! ...
Quick overview video about making game characters from Blender to Unreal:
• How to Make a 3D Game ...
In depth workflow video on making game-ready characters:
• How I Create Character...
#unrealengine #Imadeagame #gamedev #learning #gamedesign

Пікірлер
  • going from "I gave myself 2 weeks to make a really simple concept" to "I spent $80 on physics and weather plugins instead of implementing gameplay" is the quintessential solo game dev experience

    @Lextorias@Lextorias2 ай бұрын
    • I've been learning Unreal Engine game dev, never done any of this before. I made my first game, similar to the above following a Gorka Games tutorial on youtube. Took me about 11 days, about 1 to 2 hours per day. But I didn't buy anything to make it work, just used the free assets from Unreal Engine Library. Same exact style of game, same kind of health bar, same 'wave spawner' system where you fight enemies in waves. I'm not an experienced game dev by any means, but I think basic level design (putting down trees, landscape, etc) is the easiest part of the whole thing. Basically just point and click to paint stuff down or resize things. It's the actual game mechanics that take much longer, where you add code behind the scenes. I'm only using blueprints (no direct C++) and it's been great so far. I'm now 33 days into learning Unreal Engine and I'm working on my 2nd game by following a tutorial. But it's more of an adventure game similar to Tomb Raider. On a side note, Metahumans look fantastic, but they are not optimized at all. Once I added my 3rd metahuman into my 2nd game the level editor became almost unusable. I had to turn down the LOD on all metahumans to '1' (lowest setting) just so I could keep using the editor. And I'm doing it with 64gb memory, RTX 3090, and AMD Ryzen 9 5900x... I won't be using metahumans in the future, just not optimized enough.

      @slandshark@slandshark2 ай бұрын
    • You ain't wrong lol

      @dreadtrain2846@dreadtrain28462 ай бұрын
    • that's depends on you have more time or more money lol

      @dreamingacacia@dreamingacacia2 ай бұрын
    • Yep, that's the must have experience for all solo devs, also download a million animation and assets you dont use

      @thatlittlespider@thatlittlespider2 ай бұрын
    • i dont have a lot of money but as a solo dev as soon as i start trying to add something to my game i check the marketplace and see if its already been done. Then if yes see if it has good reviews and is easy to implement for newbies, and then figure out if i can afford it :)

      @pryzmgaming@pryzmgaming2 ай бұрын
  • Careful EA or Ubisoft might try and hire you as the way things are going you might be the most experienced person they have.

    @EastyyBlogspot@EastyyBlogspot2 ай бұрын
    • True for EA minus Respawn.

      @ac6339@ac63392 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, I have the feeling they hire people who have just finished an online course.

      @ghosterino@ghosterino2 ай бұрын
    • Lol

      @giocareperdivertirsi@giocareperdivertirsi2 ай бұрын
    • The quality of their games isn't dictated by the quality of their develops, it's dictated by the poor management of the companies.

      @JFrenchman@JFrenchman2 ай бұрын
    • @@JFrenchman oh yeah i know that so many stories of games being developed for years but due to management time being wasted as well as crunch....and the problem is its pushing out the talented devs to strike out with indie companies, Rocksteady for example is a shell of its former self along with Bioware

      @EastyyBlogspot@EastyyBlogspot2 ай бұрын
  • I am a game producer (project manager) in the video game industry for 15 years but also now learning how to do my own games on the side. I think your biggest pitfall was focusing on the look of the game before the gameplay itself. Once you have a base idea, just "Whitebox" it. No importing 3D models, animations, textures, etc... Just use the mannequins and simple shapes and focus on your core game loop. Do small iterations. This means setting a goal for the day, for example "implement simple AI enemies that will attack me". and put all your effort into that. Then assess what you have and set your next goal for the next day. Once you have your core loop and gameplay. spend time playtesting yourself, and maybe 1-2 other friends to see what can be improved. Once you have a fun game that is working, then you can focus on the UI and then the look of the game. Anyway, I wish you the best of luck and look forward to more videos!

    @michaelvallierii7945@michaelvallierii79453 күн бұрын
    • i'm a 3d artist and a C++ programmer. if i work alone do i have a bit of chance of making smth work?

      @Elias01056@Elias010562 күн бұрын
    • @@Elias01056 Anyone has a chance to make something work so long they keep with it and keep their priorities in order.

      @michaelvallierii7945@michaelvallierii79452 күн бұрын
    • @@michaelvallierii7945 indeed. it takes years tho

      @Elias01056@Elias010562 күн бұрын
    • What friends are for. You have discord?

      @pennywisethejoker6012@pennywisethejoker6012Күн бұрын
    • Thanks for the advice, this helped me get my head around my project. I was getting bogged down in thinking about how I could possibly make everything look the way I wanted (while having little game dev experience) to the point where I wasn't getting anything done at all.

      @unknowncaller7530@unknowncaller75306 сағат бұрын
  • I started into Unreal like 2 weeks ago, with the mission of making my own game and god I can relate to this video. Excited to see how you progress, and appreciate you sharing the roadblocks and solutions. The biggest lesson I’ve learnt so far is to stay focused on one aspect at a time, which is super hard when you keep finding shiny videos on how to do “cool” things in UE. I’ve now made myself just save videos and not watch them until I’m finished with what I’m working on before getting distracted 😅

    @BrokenParadoxCreative@BrokenParadoxCreative25 күн бұрын
  • "until I got distracted literally 7 seconds in and watched a 2 hour long podcast" classic.

    @sebbo59@sebbo592 ай бұрын
    • happens everyday lol

      @erickr199@erickr1992 ай бұрын
    • The only solution I found for that is using Pomodoro, a cycle of 25 min of work and 5 min doing whatever I want.

      @mrxcs@mrxcsАй бұрын
    • Currently me rn

      @theartworkhub@theartworkhub20 күн бұрын
    • "heh, rookie mistake" as i watch this video and look at the comments instead of getting sh*t done.

      @kaique9508@kaique95087 күн бұрын
  • As someone who has been developing games for nearly 5 years, my biggest bit of advice would be to focus on the core systems before anything else. Example core systems being, (attacking, taking damage, dodging, health, enemy movement, ai movement). Polish and design can always come later.

    @EtheralGames@EtheralGames2 ай бұрын
    • Thank you!! This is the kind of tips i’m looking for

      @JackSather@JackSather2 ай бұрын
    • I think that applies to creating anything. I'm studying graphic design and doing my fair share of web development on the side and this approach is the best when it comes to designing anything consistently. You go in with a simple, small idea, sketch it out in any medium that you want to (be it a drawing on a piece of paper, some notes in a notepad or some rough code), then you make it function well and at the very end you can make it look good. Ofc thats just one approach but I think it can help anyone getting started in creating. And if you want to really learn to make videogames you just need to make a lot of small ones, GMTK has a great series focusing more on his thinking than programming when it comes to creating a videogame.

      @yaranaikaexecute3196@yaranaikaexecute31962 ай бұрын
    • As someone who’s been in the industry for more than 20 years, I second that advice. Also, looking forward to seeing you progress!

      @ericlagel@ericlagel2 ай бұрын
    • Spitting straight facts. You can always build upon an idea or system even if the initial system is miniscule.

      @timaltstadt824@timaltstadt8242 ай бұрын
    • This is basically what I came here to say. Gameplay first, art later, like way later.

      @FakeEnema@FakeEnema2 ай бұрын
  • this was so cool!! good video and story telling

    @ExploringWithJosh@ExploringWithJoshАй бұрын
    • Holy, I haven't seen you in ages!! Guess I'll start watching all your videos from 22 and up now 😂

      @JayRowMay.@JayRowMay.Ай бұрын
  • This is honestly very inspiring. I've played games all my life and have always wondered about making my own game but fearing that it was just writing lines of code all day. Seeing you with the same passion and going out and chasing it is awesome. Love the video!

    @bearlybearable3407@bearlybearable3407Ай бұрын
  • who else is procrastinating by watching this video right now?

    @PrymalChaos@PrymalChaosАй бұрын
    • Waiting on ue to download ironically enough. Went looking for something to watch. Good job augarithium.

      @ErichToven@ErichTovenАй бұрын
    • Underrated comment!

      @rosendaniel1258@rosendaniel1258Ай бұрын
    • I was supposed to be studying for CCNA, but I'll do it later.

      @JeffJK000@JeffJK000Ай бұрын
    • I don’t want to talk about it lol

      @qNeros@qNerosАй бұрын
    • Im always procrastinating something. If I could procrastinate life for like a week and just like sleep I would

      @hargel3870@hargel3870Ай бұрын
  • Being a game dev over 10+ years. I would like that every single person who stated "making games is easy", "that's not working, you're just playing a game" (or any other comment understimating game developers) to watch this. It is HARD WORK to make games. I felt your struggle, same thing happen to me years ago, but over time, you will know how to save and manage your time better. Keep on going, once you get that satisfaction of seeing your game working, and other people enjoying it, is addictive.

    @IsmaelSerrada@IsmaelSerrada2 ай бұрын
    • Yes, I just started few days ago and have to say it's very hard, if you are making solo game you not only have to learn programming, you also have to learn how to make assets For 2d (know how to paint) and for 3d know how to do 3d modeling, texture making and also know how the game engine works. And If you are creating your own game engine than that's another level of difficulty. These things individually takes months to learn or even years.

      @gamerz000.@gamerz000.Ай бұрын
    • @@gamerz000. yes it can be super time consuming I love art so for me it was a must learn but yk there are hundreds of thousands of ready templaes for your first project dont try to reinvent the wheel , unless you really want to ofc you can , anyways best of luck fellow GameDev

      @arcanep@arcanepАй бұрын
    • @@arcanep no i guess I won't need it, I am making low poly 3D game and i am just making a city builder game in which we are a person in the city (the Ruler) and I want to do it all by myself so I can learn more. But Thanks for the recommendation.

      @gamerz000.@gamerz000.Ай бұрын
    • I so get this. Even my wife who knows exactly how hard what we do is... I can feel her rolling her eyes when I say I have a ton of work to do. Like, everything we've done to be a part of game creation, almost ruined games for us, or for many... did ruin video games for them.

      @Omnistudios-ps1ko@Omnistudios-ps1koАй бұрын
    • agreed - I almost wish he hadn't shown the bit at the end, and just stopped at the end of the two weeks. I know, give people hope and all that, but you really need to hammer home the fact that game making IS HARD.

      @MrAndyPuppy@MrAndyPuppyАй бұрын
  • Man, I really really appreciate this video. I have been trying to learn game dev in the same exact way, I feel like I just watched a video of myself. Except for one key difference, you kept with it. I've hit all these different levels of frustration and given up and revisited over and over. Sometimes I get so discouraged I start thinking I'm the only one that runs into these problems and that I'm incapable. Oddly enough I found your video "Getting distracted" but it was exactly what I needed to see at this moment. I forget we all learn and experience the same difficulties and I need to power through and continue to learn. Thank you for the gentle reminder that we all struggle in the same ways but gotta push through to see progress. Thank you for your time, your humor, and your complete honesty. Great video and i'll be subscribing for more to follow you along this journey!

    @TheWordofChrist@TheWordofChristАй бұрын
  • I love this so much. I've been exploring the possibility of getting into game development, and the fact that you did this in 2 weeks is amazing. You've given me the push to just go with it and try it out

    @brythewiseguy@brythewiseguyАй бұрын
  • As a professional game designer who has worked on AAA Games, the parts where you go "why isnt this working?!" then realize its a button press hit home lol. Keep it up man, love the video.

    @nathankellman3183@nathankellman3183Ай бұрын
    • Control system engineer can proudly say it wasn't a button. It was a typo in the makescript or config file xD

      @MrHaggyy@MrHaggyyАй бұрын
    • Thats kinda cool that you worked on Diablo 4.

      @ExarchGaming@ExarchGamingАй бұрын
    • Just as a general question what game engine do AAA titles use?

      @weirdthings9583@weirdthings958327 күн бұрын
    • Just as a general question what game engine do AAA titles use?

      @weirdthings9583@weirdthings958327 күн бұрын
    • @@weirdthings9583 For the most part the one the publisher is providing. EA has Frostbite, Ubisoft has Ubisoft Anvil, and Blizzard used to write the engine alongside the game so Diablo 3 or WoW all have a tailored engine for what the game needs. Today many tailor Unreal for 3D and Unity for 2D made games.

      @MrHaggyy@MrHaggyy26 күн бұрын
  • This is something that I can't help but admire. As someone who has tried to get back into programming and learning it only to give up after a few days, I can relate to the frustrations and glimpses of hope you get when actually managing to make something work as you imagined. I also love how you show the "mistakes" and how your attention can only hold for so long until something else grasps it away. I truly hope you continue with this and actually start producing great games, since you have a creative mindset and a vision what you are aiming towards.

    @Repeeli@Repeeli2 ай бұрын
    • Thank you, and we’re still cranking! On my first paid udemy course recommended by someone that emailed me

      @JackSather@JackSather2 ай бұрын
    • Start smaller. Give yourself projects you can actually complete. Plenty of excellent 2d games. Try game maker studio. Don’t do visual code, do the actual code and quickly move into scripts and inheritance. Give yourself goals you CAN achieve and start small. Then you will actually learn and you’ll love it. It’s the difference between trying to make something AAA and just giving up vs making some meh games that feel complete which help stepping stones to greater projects.

      @ShadyRapture@ShadyRaptureАй бұрын
    • Oh from someone who does programming for a living gaining control over yourself is the key. Like you do stupid misstakes when you got tiltet in a competitive video game, programming can overwhelm you with frustration if something doesn't work. If you want to get better you need to replace frustration with curiosity. Collect things that work. Try braking those pieces and understand them. Ask yourself why something doesn't behave like you want it to and experiment around a lot. Keeping your attention at programming is like running. You need to build your stamina slowly over time. Gladly my job involves a lot of other timeconsuming tasks, because i still couldn't maintain ~40h of pure programming a week. It's really time consuming to become a decent programmer. Good education can give you a jumpstart, but you need to start grinding and embracing it at some point.

      @MrHaggyy@MrHaggyyАй бұрын
    • could you share the udemy course by chance?@@JackSather

      @x1FaTaLIx@x1FaTaLIxАй бұрын
    • @@JackSather Have you tried to buy into Unreal Sensei's Masterclass? I bought into his Masterclass 2 years ago and I'm not sorry, he has really good tutorials starting from scratch

      @idkProduction10@idkProduction1010 күн бұрын
  • This was a great watch! I hope you do extremely well in this endeavor and come out of it better then ever!

    @JayRowMay.@JayRowMay.Ай бұрын
  • I love that you also talked about the problems that you stumbled on in game and life, not many people talk about this, and they tryna make it seem like they didn t put that effort into making something. cuz now everyone shows only the succes. and it also helps others, they can also learn from your mistakes, or simphatize with with like see that they have those problems, struggles too. it isn t just them(cuz that s how social media makes us think cuz they show only the succes). so Thank You!

    @probrawlstarsplayer5400@probrawlstarsplayer5400Ай бұрын
  • There's your studio name... "Just a horse games"

    @Nirox12@Nirox122 ай бұрын
    • "I've got a KZhead channel" ltd

      @crevanizekil@crevanizekil2 ай бұрын
    • "I sorta make games" home studios ADD limited

      @6ftS@6ftS2 ай бұрын
    • "Just the horse studios"

      @johncole4882@johncole48822 ай бұрын
    • Careful now. You might summon vaush.

      @Butter625@Butter6252 ай бұрын
    • JAH Games

      @GodOfWarConnoisseur@GodOfWarConnoisseur2 ай бұрын
  • The ending made me happy. A true testament to the saying “finished over perfect.” Nice job!

    @gtritz4223@gtritz42232 ай бұрын
    • Perfection is the enemy of the good enough.

      @TheOtherOtherAccount@TheOtherOtherAccount2 ай бұрын
    • Ubisoft says “Not finished…Perfect”

      @Salamattder@Salamattder2 ай бұрын
  • Hello Jack, I'd highly recommend creating small projects if you want to make games and keep the process fun. Take the game you're showing us now, for example. Turning that into a full game could be a 3-year journey if you already know the scope and story of the game, but realistically, we're talking about 5 years. There are many things people forget when it comes to games, but one good example is picking up items. Implementing the action of a character picking up an item is not hard, but what's difficult is getting the game to understand every situation that can happen and still perform the task correctly. What should happen if you get attacked at the same time you pick up an item? What happens if you cancel picking up the item, and so on. Try making a game that is single-based, in a close environment, and with simple mechanics. That will give you the chance to succeed but also push yourself to create more advanced projects in the future.

    @allabout3d235@allabout3d23517 күн бұрын
  • I just stumbled across this video and your channel. THANK YOU for documenting this journey. It's the first time I have felt genuinely seen in the journey we all share called "Solo Game Dev with ADHD" (you mention not being diagnosed, but the constant distractions and other problems you run into are my experience to a tee). Seeing the joy on your face when you figure something out and show off what you finished with is the type of payoff that myself, and a lot of people, are striving for.

    @TheDonkerZ@TheDonkerZ12 күн бұрын
  • Good luck on your journey. In case you don't know, Astlibra and Chained Echoes are 2 of the most amazing JRPGs and both were made by one guy.

    @EldenPeasant@EldenPeasant2 ай бұрын
    • Wasn’t expecting to see Astlibra mentioned here of all places! +1 to both these.

      @Evanz111@Evanz1112 ай бұрын
    • Kenshi was mostly made by a single madlad, and he brought more people into the project after his initial success with it.

      @JL32506@JL325062 ай бұрын
  • I’m really proud of you for doing this Jack! Small as it is, it actually seems fun and shows perseverance!

    @sleeksays2858@sleeksays28582 ай бұрын
  • It is really captivating ( to the point that it's entangling) to hear and see your excitement about doing such a bold move. Whatever you do, do it with a spark of passion( You, mister, definitely have it. ) Good luck , work hard, and (most importantly) have fun while doing so.

    @vitalyvainer2831@vitalyvainer2831Ай бұрын
  • im so glad u went back and kept going had a huge smile on my face really inspiring that is VERY impressive for 14 days i think you showed to not give up if you load up ue or whatever you want to do enough times and keep pressing buttons, watching tutorials, soaking up everything you can about the subject and eventually something is going to work its inevitable but give yourself the time to learn if you say you can't you won't the mind is a very powerful thing!

    @chasecsgo7041@chasecsgo7041Ай бұрын
  • whenever i play indie games like dredge or something i always think ‘man, i wish i made this’ i hope u can make this work. and think ‘man, im glad i made this’

    @cIoudbank@cIoudbank2 ай бұрын
  • You learned so fast! I loved how everything turned out. I'm happy my tutorials were helpful! ❤

    @GorkaGames@GorkaGames2 ай бұрын
    • Bro, you are the GOAT man. You really helped me through my Game Dev course at University. The way you explain things makes it super easy to understand.

      @westonparker2293@westonparker22932 ай бұрын
    • THE LEGEND APPEARS

      @pterafier@pterafier2 ай бұрын
    • @GorkaGames dude!! Thank you so much for your help! Your a legend out here

      @JackSather@JackSather2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@pterafierhow are you here you play ark and make ark content

      @moregamingplayz9002@moregamingplayz90022 ай бұрын
    • no way

      @boss-ut6yw@boss-ut6ywАй бұрын
  • Your video game concept is so great, the Viking, glowing tombstone and Valhalla end lol. Thank you for this video, I found it because I’m looking to make my own game, so thank you, it inspired me and showed me quite a lot

    @hallofguts@hallofguts25 күн бұрын
  • This has been my experience with every single project of mine, ever since learning blender. Having a giant dream, trying to make just the minimum viable product and then three weeks later 12h/day banging my head on the keyboard and getting distracted by KZhead/downloading way too many assets I'll never use, I restart five times and keep adding stuff until it breaks, then overshoot my deadline by another two weeks, and then settle for even less than I originally thought would be the worst case scenario. It's the life of a CG artist, and it's very similar to a game dev, except I never have to deal with programing.

    @FractalParadox@FractalParadox4 күн бұрын
  • This dude’s style of videos is awesome

    @therealfrogjuice@therealfrogjuice2 ай бұрын
    • Not for this video

      @fightwithonefilms@fightwithonefilmsАй бұрын
  • While i greatly applaud the effort, the problem is you’re basically trying to do / learn everything all at once. Most solo devs started with a foundational experience in one craft of game making and then ‘winged it’ for the rest, slowly learning everything else. I’ve been in the industry 15 years and i still barely can make my own games, coding especially haha

    @pascalcleroux6@pascalcleroux62 ай бұрын
    • thats the reality for most solo indie devs

      @bam_bino__@bam_bino__2 ай бұрын
    • That's the case with the people who start out in directly in the industry. I am a back-end developer/systems designer by trade, but in reality I can do some devops, front-end stuff, desktop apps, machine learning because I had to because I did not land a job directly. Most people in my team severely lacks the understand of other parts of the development cycle. Lacking the knowledge is easy problem to fix, but usually people learn to rely on other people which is called having a skill in teamwork. Well, I never learned that fully. Been solo for so long, started a job solo, got raise after raise while being solo, hired other people and made the project modular enough that I can stay solo. Now I am about to turn 30 and decided to make a video game for the first time in my life. I am for sure making use of my profession using my coding skills both in C++ and Blueprint in UE. I am for sure using my understanding of front-end and UI/UX experience. I am for sure using my very little skill in 3D modelling because when I was 20, I needed money and had to learn Blender, haha. I find myself jumping between these skills and losing a lot of time in one sense, but gaining precious knowledge in other sense. The thing is that nowadays, the video game engines are just advanced enough to make it easier for us. Is asset flipping bad? Maybe yes. But you can use those assets to make the prototype of your game and focus on learning other parts and maybe you can get a 3D designer to help you in the future. When one focuses on the good aspects of it, one realizes that it has never been this easy. Still difficult, but the easiest so far.

      @echorises@echorises2 ай бұрын
    • Skill issue

      @InsomniaNest@InsomniaNest2 ай бұрын
    • I've been coding in Godot for a few months now and at a base level it's extremely user friendly and intuitive on the other hand I still know very little of the obvious infinite depth of coding techniques but am quickly learning the basics.

      @mistermelancholy7698@mistermelancholy76982 ай бұрын
    • @@mistermelancholy7698yah! Godot’s great, i’ve been experimenting with it as well, gscript’s super easy to learn too, my problem is just ‘sticking with it’ i get too distracted with another game idea haha

      @pascalcleroux6@pascalcleroux62 ай бұрын
  • I really enjoyed seeing your journey when making a game. It is something I have grown interested in myself. I work more on the cinematics side, but I can remember when I started working in Unreal and going down the endless rabbit hole. Keep going man.

    @thatboicrossent@thatboicrossentАй бұрын
  • I actually cant wait for another video like this I love seeing new game dev's getting introduced to game development and I love watching it

    @noamlaros3965@noamlaros3965Ай бұрын
  • Great video and very relatable haha! Excited to follow your progress and best of luck on this journey :)

    @Hazardous@Hazardous2 ай бұрын
    • The 🐐

      @MR_ZERO230@MR_ZERO2302 ай бұрын
    • Thanks bro!!

      @JackSather@JackSatherАй бұрын
    • Cant wait to play your game, been watching since the first recreating stunts video.

      @The_Gaming_Kiwi@The_Gaming_KiwiАй бұрын
    • @@JackSathersuper awesome, to also see all your pitfalls was super interesting. I can relate am in the middle of learning it. I bought myself a course in unreal 5 which will take you in ten days from noob to be able to use the entire engine, make you familiar with all it's lingo, basics and then some. It is a filmmaker course. But it also learned me the in and outs of the engine itself. I can confidently say that I could make a game in 2 weeks just from this course alone. It goes into every detail in bitesize chunks so you don't need to sit through 5 hours of footage. It breaks it down day by day in 30-60 min sections and after ten days you actually know unreal 5. It also updates everytime a new feature is added and you get lifetime acces to it. I bought it at a discount, but believe me this course is the real deal. It's called boudless resourse in case you want to know. I am not sponsored but this resource literally changed my life. I hope this helps you out in some way shape or form. Just felt I had to share it with you since it has helped me tremendously...

      @Lalaland.001@Lalaland.001Ай бұрын
    • I got a question, not to detract or take away credit from this man here at all but where are the KZhead guys who are educated in making actual games that aren’t big or mainstream? From the first few minutes it seems like this is just some guy who loves videos games trying to make a game.

      @eg769@eg769Ай бұрын
  • I didn't thought you would go down this route but damn is it a dream of mine too. Good luck on the road and I hope you will make some unique and great games in the long run!

    @perfectenrager@perfectenrager2 ай бұрын
    • If you really want to, there's no better time than to start now and you could even e-mail Jack. As said, it's a passion thing, hell, the team could exchange so much knowledge out of passion itself that you could learn new things and teach new things. A true collaborative experience! And if you do decide to start learning, best of luck and remember, you can do this, no matter who says what!

      @SKandSCS@SKandSCS2 ай бұрын
    • Even if he can just have fun with it, it would be fun to follow along with the journey. And him having a large audience and captivating personality, will make it worthwhile, whether he finishes it or not. Also he shouldn't worry too much, about the horse and cart thing. Even a AAA game studio such as Bethesda can't get that one right. You thought I was talking about their workflow with Starfield right? Where they just started making all the different systems, hoping it would eventually turn into a streamlined game. It did not. BUT I was actually referring to the intro to Skyrim and the glitchy horse+cart. I'm 36 myself and have been wanting to make games for many years. Started learning unreal many years ago, when UE4 had a subscription model. But I stopped doing it for many years, due to multiple reasons, including mental and physical health issues. I'm really wanting to get back on that horse now and these kinds of videos are very inspirational. Its my dream to create something. Not even to make money or for clout or anything. I just want to make something I like to play myself, and others might enjoy as well.

      @DeltaNovum@DeltaNovum2 ай бұрын
  • Good for you on giving this a go! I’ve been working on my first game (Champion of Andia) for the last 4 years. And this video takes me back down memory lane! Making a game is such a FRUSTRATING process. But the satisfaction of getting X,Y,Z to work is unmatched! Congratulations on your progress so far!

    @DCJGaming@DCJGamingАй бұрын
  • I feel your grind ^^ I started working on building a game engine for my own stuff. I took this approach because I personally love learning how things work on the inside, and I gotta say it’s been a lot of fun so far. I hope you get that game done ❤

    @edgymarshmellow8493@edgymarshmellow84936 күн бұрын
  • So pleased you watched and enjoyed my video! Really interested in your journey too, good luck with it all, I’m just starting to take a look at UE5 to see if I can incorporate it into VR and/or games in the future.

    @EpicSpaceman@EpicSpaceman2 ай бұрын
    • Bless you, Mr Spaceman...

      @rageagainstmyhatchet@rageagainstmyhatchetАй бұрын
  • Hi Jack, I was a senior game designer at Square Enix for 7 years. I worked on Final fantasy 15, 16 and kingdom hearts 3. Honestly for a newcomer, you did really good man. You created more game in 2 weeks than i did in a month when i first started (and I was unemployed 😂). Good gob my dude. My only critique is that you didnt add any taxi's, and the game is not called crazy taxi, and the game is not crazy taxi. If you add those simple elements, you might have some gold on your hands.

    @adecentname56@adecentname562 ай бұрын
    • Didn't really ask ok

      @bootymuncherwebb7045@bootymuncherwebb70452 ай бұрын
    • Thanks man! And This is the advice i’m looking for people 🚕

      @JackSather@JackSather2 ай бұрын
    • You should have told them to make a new final fantasy tatics

      @seandavid9440@seandavid94402 ай бұрын
    • ​@seandavid9440 BIG FACTS OMG. Sorry I loved that game growing up.

      @CrossfireGamingNetwork@CrossfireGamingNetworkАй бұрын
  • Great video. As a former professional game Artist 3d/generalist, your decision to give Blender a whirl is awesome. Your idea in filming yourself for animations is spot-on, and a technique used by professional animators for decades. When I was learning 3d animation (before KZhead, working on a Pentium 66MHz PC and an SGI Onyx) we always had mirrors at our desks to learn facial animation and were literally throwing ourselves on the floors to nail the movement of a death animation. Keep up the work and don't be afraid to get into the meat of traditional modeling and animation. It is becoming a lost art among indy devs. Creating your own assets will give you freedom in design and your game a consistency in visual style you will never get from purchased assets alone. Rock. On.

    @soloCRPG@soloCRPGАй бұрын
  • This video convinced me to finally start my game dev journey and I have been learning unreal from the ground up for the last 2 weeks , would be really awesome to see a part 2 either building further on what you made or with the knowledge you have now see what you could do in another 2 weeks .

    @Scruffy-fv6xi@Scruffy-fv6xi10 күн бұрын
  • Love seeing creative people do creative things, shout out Jack Sather

    @aidancusack4483@aidancusack44832 ай бұрын
  • Hell yeah, welcome to the game dev journey! Even after using UE for 8+ years, I'm still constantly learning the tools- it's a software that encompasses a whole umbrella of jobs so it can definitely become a bit overwhelming. If you ever need any assistance with the learning journey, feel free to throw me or any other UE devs a message, the community is very open to helping each other. Great video!

    @FirstCrimson@FirstCrimson2 ай бұрын
    • I will!

      @JackSather@JackSather2 ай бұрын
    • Omg you made suit for hire! That’s where I know you from, I was like, I’m subbed to you haha, yes lets get connected

      @JackSather@JackSather2 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for this video! I started this last week and OH BOY! Feels like I haven't learned anything though I definitely know more than I did before I started. I'm excited to keep learning.

    @CesarsHideout@CesarsHideoutАй бұрын
  • This is exactly what I needed, thank you for sharing your experience~~~~It's good to know you~~

    @ChuMingming-xn3jb@ChuMingming-xn3jb25 күн бұрын
  • As someone who did youtube and makes games now, it's so fulfilling and I'm glad to see a youtuber trying it out! Making games is all about learning from the failures and trying again, and you did exactly that! There are probably people looking at the final game like "Damn I wish I could make that", and you should be proud to have made it. Also UDS is amazing. Best of luck on your journey! I've been in Unreal for about a year and a half and i'm starting to feel like a real dev lol

    @pterafier@pterafier2 ай бұрын
  • The attention thing rings home so much to me. I set out to just do something new and end up spending the day regretfully wasting it, and then wishing I had done better. I'm so happy that you managed to overcome that!

    @EtherealSandwich@EtherealSandwich2 ай бұрын
  • I SO feel your frustration with Unreal Engine. Things not working for seemingly no good reason... It's nice to know that it isn't just me. Thanks for sharing this and for being so transparent :)

    @Mngzkhuel@MngzkhuelАй бұрын
  • Im giving you both thumbs up dude! You did great for a beginner and as I see it, you´re halfway there already. Big up brother!

    @lilltattarn94@lilltattarn94Ай бұрын
  • Broooooo!!!! I'm so excited! I started learning UE4 about 4 years ago as a hobby during COVID. Since I found your channel, all the videos on awesome game ideas (coughs in Bannerlords video), I thought, "I need to make one of his ideas a reality!" Time for me to put the work in and get good enough to make it happen.

    @chalonhutson@chalonhutson2 ай бұрын
  • You have quickly become one of my favourite youtubers and its funny because this past month ive been really wanting to learn unreal but ive let mt fears get the better of me. I think this truly gave me the push i need to make the jump.... Thanks man :)

    @BuffDaddySmoove@BuffDaddySmoove2 ай бұрын
  • This video is so relatable I also started with that castle tutorial for Unreal. You had more experience with stuff I haven't messed with yet but I was so happy to finally finish my own version of that castle scene I spent way too long over downloading and finding the right assets and just making it way more complicated than it needed to be but in the end I think that I learned a lot more by just letting my imagination go wild🙂

    @edgelessuser5@edgelessuser58 күн бұрын
  • This is the first video that I'm watching from you, and let me tell you that seeing the last part of the video really made me proud. That game looks amazing and I'm happy that you didnt quit. For the moment I don't have a pc to make games on, but I also want to create some amazing games that I have in mind. It might take me years but at least you made me feel like not giving up. Thank you :).

    @onion6862@onion6862Ай бұрын
  • I don't make video games but I make board games, and this is one of the most important things to nail down. At the start you should spend 90% on mechanics and maybe 10% on visuals. Just enough to not have an eye bleed while testing. You never know when visuals or even your entire theme might change. Then as you progress and things get more established that ratio can shift until by the end its 90% visuals and 10% mechanics. It's hard because beautiful visuals are motivating and get you excited more easily than fixing the umpteenth bug etc. but it saves a lot of time and money, especially if things change mid project. **That said, I found this inspiring and anyone starting their journey is cause for celebration!

    @jaredtolley4785@jaredtolley4785Ай бұрын
  • This is one of the best videos I have seen so far on youtube regarding game development. The struggles are real. I also wanted to create my own game but never got to do it. I hate myself every day for it but this video has given me some hope. Finally I will start making my own game Thanks for sharing your experience. Kudos to you. Dont stop now, its only the beginning...

    @Mr_Sin99@Mr_Sin992 ай бұрын
  • It's a pretty good result actually! I've been using Unreal since UDK and had a similar learning journey as you. But I've found that reading the documentation on the topic I'm trying to learn is the most effective way for me.

    @CountMount-Cristus@CountMount-CristusАй бұрын
  • this is so cool man! Just found your channel and I am already in love. Please keep going on this!!

    @BasickingYT@BasickingYTАй бұрын
  • Jack, DO NOT compare yourself to others! As you may know very well, the videos you watch that show how to do things, or the guys who make a playable experience or game in X amount of days, they don't show all of the struggle!! It's not always what it seems! You are an inspiration to me because I have been down this same road as well but I was not as committed as you are. You're the freakin man, keep it up.

    @Nomad454@Nomad4542 ай бұрын
  • i felt this entire video deeply lol... from the same exact distraction videos to how you consume information -me these last six months learning blender. so i decided to learn unreal today, with the launch of 5.4 and just discovered your channel through this video. i'm sticking around for the journey.

    @ifthis_@ifthis_10 күн бұрын
  • Love the process Jack. This was a major distraction but I needed this. I was thinking about all flaws in my own learning today, and this was a documentary of me. The distractibility, and the endless rabbit holing due to that internal voice of 'why?' and the need to perfectly understand before moving on. Thank you Jack, my first video of yours - random recommendations.

    @somhunt5446@somhunt544613 күн бұрын
  • The amount of stress and pure suffering I had to go through to fix problems that appeared out of nowhere is accurately portrayed in this video and that gives me so much motivation. You'll get better with time, just stay persistent and don't give up.

    @mojaindustries4185@mojaindustries4185Ай бұрын
  • Absolutely loved Yahtzee’s dev diaries where he tried to make a game a month and gave us updates on the development process. Never expected to see a spiritual successor come from you, but I’m 100% down for it! Godspeed! ^^

    @Evanz111@Evanz1112 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing your experience!! I think this is the most realistic devlog I've seen. By the end it's clear how much you've learned. Congrats!! And best of luck 😁

    @Nikolay1995@Nikolay199515 күн бұрын
  • This was super interesting and cathartic to watch. I have been learning UE5 from past couple of months. This tech is mesmerizing. With all the difficulties it still attracts you towards it. I have noted down many things from this video. As you rightly said, the UE KZheadrs are doing phenomenal job of teaching. That includes you now. Subscribed.

    @user-gl6jw1zt2j@user-gl6jw1zt2jАй бұрын
  • A few of the biggest tips I can give as a senior developer. 1. Learn and use revision control. At least the basics. And commit to it every time you get something working. Work atomically as we call it. Small changes that you get working and commit because you can revert back to it if something goes wrong. 2. Learn to actually use the basic tools of unreal. Get a good grasp of typical workflows. 3. Blueprints alone will not be a good choice for building a game unless it’s little more than a walking simulator. Blueprints are in fact code, minus some syntax. 4. Watch GDC videos. If you want to see how things are done from both graphics and gameplay perspective, these are some of the best videos around. Most describe theory instead of just providing a tutorial. Two great ones are the Tsushima grass one and Spider-Man web swinging mechanic.

    @shanepadgett5567@shanepadgett55672 ай бұрын
  • I'm not a game dev, but I went through a similar character arc with music production (i.e. starting with zero experience), and I have to say that satisfaction of finally achieving a workable result is SO real. I related to this so damn much. Great job man!

    @lahiruweliwitiya2@lahiruweliwitiya22 ай бұрын
    • I started out on Protools 6.5 and worked my way into a top 10 studio...

      @anthonysacco5010@anthonysacco5010Ай бұрын
  • Thank you for thia video! Seeing the experience of someone new to unreal has actually been really hwlpful. Ive wanted to do this for so long but found it so daunting. Definitely going to sub!

    @llewischandler3260@llewischandler326010 күн бұрын
  • Just in a youtube hole watching stuff but i stuck around for yours instead of skipping. gave a sub! Looking forward to seeing more of your videos man! i feel the same way you do!

    @LowkeyLucass@LowkeyLucassАй бұрын
  • Hey! I would say I'm an intermediate 3D artist, I've been modelling for a few years but I have a lot of concepts to learn yet. In my time learning 3D, something important I've learned is what failure means. Failure is not the opposite of succeeding at something, failure only happens when you stop trying. Every time you make a mistake, every time you have to scrap everything and restart, every time you get a weird issue that you spend hours trying to fix, only for the solution to be turning on or off one tick box, is the process of improving. There is a way around every obstacle, even if it means starting over. The path forward is never blocked unless you stop trying! You never failed in this video because you came back and kept trying, and you learned so much in doing so 😄 (Also the constant youtube tutorials is so real lol I have so many playlists for Autodesk Maya, Substance Painter, Zbrush, etc.)

    @shelby1casey223@shelby1casey2232 ай бұрын
    • You remind me of what the millionaire (I can't recall who it was) said when someone asked him how he succeeded: "Fail as often as you can!"

      @greatbriton8425@greatbriton8425Ай бұрын
  • Ain’t nobody skipping to @6:30 We love you jack, and we’re totally here for the entire journey

    @JSavedTheDay@JSavedTheDay2 ай бұрын
    • i did. this 30min could be 15mins if we cut out all the nonsense. random tangents about videos he watched while being distracted? jfc

      @retrorevival1@retrorevival1Ай бұрын
  • I can relate to your struggles on a very personal level man. Thanks so much for this video. Every type of struggle you mentioned in this video feels like me, and you have inspired me that even with all of this I can still be able to get things done. So thank you very much for that. I intend on starting my own KZhead channel and this has inspired me to just get started and figure it out as I go. The anxiety is killing me though 😢😂. Wish me luck 🤞🏾

    @balogunlikwid@balogunlikwidАй бұрын
  • Love this video because it really captures almost everyone's first steps in getting into solo game dev. If I had any advice to give it would be to keep giving yourself these kinds of deadlines, trying to make small projects quickly and focusing on developing the fundamentals. Game jams are also a great way to do this in a collaborative environment.

    @Scorch052@Scorch05221 күн бұрын
  • Not as a game developer but as a 3D artist and animator: Disappearing textures are often a result of insufficient memory allocation for textures. The defaults can quickly become full if using extremely high resolution textures and/or algorithms that combine textures (such as layering the terrain texture over the rock object texture) which often creates yet another texture file besides the ones being combined. In some cases the software will attempt to store textures, especially textures with "baked in" effects like shadows or ambient occlusion or combined layers in memory locations it can not access because it is outside of the texture cache range. What it retrieves from this inaccessible memory is all zeros resulting in pure black or sometimes pure white textures or completely transparent textures depending on how it interprets the pixel data. I don't know if Unreal provides a way to increase texture cache or not, but the other way around the issue is to reduce the resolution of the base texture files. In some software the resolution reduction is done as the file is loaded into cache so you don't need to actually alter the original file. This is an experienced guess. I know nothing about Unreal, but most 3D software use similar procedures to render an image to the screen.

    @3DPDK@3DPDKАй бұрын
  • Read the title and thought this was an Ubisoft video for a second.

    @DeepCover66@DeepCover66Ай бұрын
    • 😂

      @aceshigh2784@aceshigh278428 күн бұрын
  • Love this video, especially appreciate showing the process of struggling I for sure resonate with it.

    @tumangeorange8388@tumangeorange8388Ай бұрын
  • Mannn, I love your energy! Is really good content and thank you so much for sharing this with us!

    @TSUKILORD@TSUKILORD26 күн бұрын
  • Here’s some no bs blunt advice : Game tutorials are cool in the beginning. After a few months though you need to learn to code. Most aspiring game developers avoid it because it’s not glamorous & there’s a huge learning curve. But if you want to eventually start a studio, have payroll & get your ideas out there like you said, you need to bite the bullet & learn to program eventually. If I were you I would learn how to program yesterday. Build you a solid foundation that can hold all your ideas. Beats having a shaky foundation that crumbles anytime you put a twig of an idea on it. Good luck Jack 🙏🏻

    @joshuatealeaves@joshuatealeaves2 ай бұрын
    • definitely agreed, but games need artists as much as they need programmers and if he is more inclined to be an artist wasting time on trying to understand programming is not the way to go imo. Using plugins and tutorials will only get him so far though but it's better to be a really good artist and need a programmer (and maybe learn how to workaround your weaknesses) than to be average at everything after wasting years of training into it

      @Chkoupinator@ChkoupinatorАй бұрын
    • @@Chkoupinator You’re spot on. Looking back on it I don’t why I gave him programming advice when he said he’s an artist looking to build a team. I jumped the gun 🥲

      @joshuatealeaves@joshuatealeavesАй бұрын
  • KZhead distraction is so real

    @yhwhlungs@yhwhlungs14 күн бұрын
  • Wishing you the best. Looking forward to seeing more progress.

    @fnustudios1781@fnustudios1781Ай бұрын
  • It took me two weeks to get through one of his videos due to working full time lmao but seriously amazing video and split up into chapters definitely the fastest way to get introduced into everything unreal engine

    @MagicPlayersRox@MagicPlayersRoxАй бұрын
  • Jordan Peterson really is the worst way to get distracted

    @kkon5ti@kkon5tiАй бұрын
  • Admiring your honesty there. Its nice that you share about your imperfections it inspires me to believe that i also capable for creating a game with my own

    @denkozlov4220@denkozlov422015 күн бұрын
  • This video on my recommendation page so thought I'd check it out. You've gained a sub for sure. Enjoy the video, the process, the honesty........ It's not overly stylized or "youtubey" which is refreshing. Looking forward to following your journey. From one graphic designer to another I say good luck.

    @jgrywacheski@jgrywacheskiАй бұрын
  • Thank you for telling your experience! You never imagine what can fit into the lives of others! I have ventured into developing games and learning about it from scratch, the only base being back-end programming in the field of web development. It is a philosophy, the art of programming, pure determination, discipline, patience.... Congratulations!

    @druiz912@druiz912Ай бұрын
  • Jack, thank you for putting this video together. You are not alone in your learning process. I find almost everything you described to be true. No help from google, the squirrel moments (that can last hours), the fixation of the smallest detail and the overflow of asset collection. Excellent job of not being defeated. I guess the real game was your journey into this project and being able to conquer the level boss, having a final product!

    @KevinFlynn1967@KevinFlynn196741 минут бұрын
  • i just started learning everything too, thanks for this video, I think I needed this. I'm at a point in life where its hard to go on being boring and doing nothing. The part where you said not to fixiate on being perfect (the issue with obsessing over floors you have) I think I do that to a lot of new things I try.

    @omgftwttyl@omgftwttylАй бұрын
  • We are so similar it's crazy. Great video! Trying to make my own in Unreal 5 and these new updates have made it so much nicer for artists like us who are so good with concept stuff but don't have as much experience with coding ect.

    @chadgarrett6947@chadgarrett694710 күн бұрын
  • Absolutelly amazing video. What a journey! I admire your dedication. And you even tried to to do physics in UE - it's a battle!

    @Tatiana94406@Tatiana94406Ай бұрын
  • Thank you for this video! You have inspired me even more somehow. I didn't know that was possible. Just subbed to your channel. Keep it up man 👍🏼 This is just from the first few mins of watching your video BTW.

    @nomaanishfaq8917@nomaanishfaq89179 күн бұрын
  • Hey this is really cool. Glad to see we will have another indie dev in a few years cuz we sure need em.

    @jeremiahdomer4657@jeremiahdomer4657Ай бұрын
  • As someone who is about 2 and a half years into game dev and unreal i think its awesome to see you and others dip your toes into creating games and you should be really proud of them game you made at the end of this and im happy you stuck to it and hope you can make even more cool things in the future

    @mokeman4416@mokeman4416Ай бұрын
  • Absolutely great work man! This is progress and how to learn. Time is key!!

    @aidrivendesigners@aidrivendesignersАй бұрын
    • If you aren't using ChatGPT you should be. Take screenshots of the issues that are happening as you build the game and feed them the your GPT and it can help troubleshoot much much much better than google

      @aidrivendesigners@aidrivendesignersАй бұрын
  • I am starting my journey to create short films with Unreal engine 5. And even though is for Game making, I find it it really useful to know what issues I am to encounter. Just want to say thanks for making this video even know it cause crazy frustration!!!

    @FibrousPlanetsWorld@FibrousPlanetsWorld22 күн бұрын
  • It's amazing! so much inspiring. Thanks a lot!

    @Han3D@Han3DАй бұрын
  • Great video and very entertaining. You won my subscription! Excited to see your journey!

    @user-ul3sw4ny8n@user-ul3sw4ny8nАй бұрын
  • I really enjoyed this video cuz you talked about your problems surging through the tutorial. I have that same problem at being perfeccionist too, feel you. I just do everthing of 1 topic before getting to another and that consumes most of my time! Everything must be perfect... I hope you can improve on that

    @tiagopereira2063@tiagopereira206325 күн бұрын
  • This was the first time watching some of your content. Very interesting and kept my attention. Which isn't easy😂. I also clicked that subscribe button.

    @DealinDmg@DealinDmgАй бұрын
  • You did all this foundational learning of Unreal Engine 5 just in time for 5.4! I think you've put yourself in a good position to continue on your goals!

    @Heather-kz7tn@Heather-kz7tn20 сағат бұрын
  • Honestly I really like this video and the game dev journey I’m happy to see what’s in the future of this game dev journey

    @klaplays8853@klaplays8853Ай бұрын
  • i have no experience in gamedev and seeing your process of making a game has been interesting for me. It definitely looks like a lot of hard work especially when you're tweaking small details. But i really liked the graphics and i would honestly play it. keep it up! i think u have the potential to make more cool games.

    @Shu-kaiHolliday@Shu-kaiHolliday12 күн бұрын
  • Awesome video. Glad you got it working.

    @ebenezerspludge8369@ebenezerspludge836924 күн бұрын
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