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qengine

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qengine is a cross-platform retro game engine. It is aimed at nostalgic game developers that miss simple times and enjoy creating games like it's 1997. The software renderer provides the aesthetic that we all love and the engine limitations exist to make your creativity shine.

The engine is a fork of the Quake II codebase that focuses on serving as a base for standalone games. Unlike other ports, it does not aim at being compatible with mods or the base Quake II game. In fact, many features were removed to reduce the complexity of the codebase and make the process of creating new games on top of the engine easier and faster.

Some notable changes include:

qengine screenshot

Free, open source and community-driven

qengine stands on the shoulders of giants from the Quake II community. The code is built upon Yamagi Quake II, which itself contains code from other amazing projects:

Goals

License

qengine is released under the terms of the GPL version 2. See the LICENSE file for further information.

Compiling

$ mkdir build
$ cd build
$ cmake ..
$ make

If you don't want to build the docs, or you don't want to install the deps they require, you can pass -DBUILD_DOCS=OFF to cmake.

$ cmake -DBUILD_DOCS=OFF ..
$ make

Running

The engine will look for game data in the assets folder. You can start from scratch, or use the original Quake II game data if you own it.

Tools

Included with the engine there are quite a few useful tools. They are:

Mapping

Textures

UI

Compiling maps

$ tools/qbsp3 assets/maps/sample.map
$ tools/qvis3 assets/maps/sample.bsp
$ tools/qrad3 assets/maps/sample.bsp

Base assets

In order to run, the engine needs a few base assets, such as sounds, models and UI textures. Most of them are already included in the assets folder.

Palette

The engine works with a 256 color palette. However, the colormap.pcx file is a 256x320 color re-arrangement of those colors, resulting in 64 shades of each.

A GIMP palette is included to facilitate creation of new graphics for the engine: assets/palette.gpl

If you want more creative freedom, you can easily create a new palette. Create a PCX file with the 256 colors you have chosen and then:

$ tools/pcx2pal palette.pcx palette.pal
$ tools/colormap palette.pal colormap.pcx