Releases: phaserjs/phaser
Phaser 3.61.0 Beta 1
New Features
Text.setRTL
is a new method that allows you to set a Text Game Object as being rendered from right-to-left, instead of the default left to right (thanks @rexrainbow)FX.Circle.backgroundAlpha
is a new property that allows you to set the amount of the alpha of the background color in the Circle FX (thanks @rexrainbow)Physics.Arcade.World.singleStep
is a new method that will advance the Arcade Physics World simulation by exactly 1 step (thanks @monteiz)Tilemaps.ObjectLayer.id
is a new property that returns the ID of the Object Layer, if specified within Tiled, or zero otherwise. You can now access the unique layer ID of Tiled layers if the event a map doesn't have unique layer names (thanks @rui-han-crh)Tilemaps.LayerData.id
is a new property that returns the ID of the Data Layer, if specified within Tiled, or zero otherwise (thanks @rui-han-crh)Text.setLetterSpacing
is a new method andText.lineSpacing
is the related property that allows you to set the spacing between each character of a Text Game Object. The value can be either negative or positive, causing the characters to get closer or further apart. Please understand that enabling this feature will cause Phaser to render each character in this Text object one by one, rather than use a draw for the whole string. This makes it extremely expensive when used with either long strings, or lots of strings in total. You will be better off creating bitmap font text if you need to display large quantities of characters with fine control over the letter spacing (thanks @Ariorh1337)ParticleEmitter.clearDeathZones
is a new method that will clear all previously created Death Zones from a Particle Emitter (thanks @rexrainbow)ParticleEmitter.clearEmitZones
is a new method that will clear all previously created Emission Zones from a Particle Emitter (thanks @rexrainbow)
Updates
- The
WebAudioSoundManager
will now bind thebody
to theremoveEventListener
method, if it exists, to prevent memory leaks (thanks @wjaykim) - The
AnimationManager.globalTimeScale
property is now applied to all Game Objects using the Animation component, allowing you to globally speed-up or slow down all animating objects (thanks @TJ09) - The
Rope
Game Object now callsinitPostPipeline
allowing you to use Post FX directly on it, such as glow, blur, etc. Fix #6550 (thanks @rexrainbow) - The
Tween.stop
method will now check to see ifTween.parent
is set. If not, it won't try to set a pending removal state or dispatch an event, which should help guard against errors whereTween.stop
is called by mistake on already destroyed tweens (thanks @orcomarcio) - The
Tween.remove
method will now check to see ifTween.parent
exists before trying to remove it from the parent. This should help guard against errors whereTween.remove
is called by mistake on already removed or destroyed tweens. Fix #6539 (thanks @orcomarcio) Particle.alpha
is now clamped to the range 0 to 1 within theupdate
method, preventing it from going out of range. Fix #6551 (thanks @orcomarcio)Math.Wrap
has been reverted to the previous version. Fix #6479 (thanks @EmilSV)
Bug Fixes
Particle.scaleY
would always be set to thescaleX
value, even if given a different one within the config. It will now use its own value correctly.Array.Matrix.RotateLeft
was missing thetotal
parameter, which controls how many times to rotate the matrix.Array.Matrix.RotateRight
was missing thetotal
parameter, which controls how many times to rotate the matrix.Array.Matrix.TranslateMatrix
didn't work with any translation values above 1 due to missing parameters inRotateLeft
andRotateRight
FX.Blur
didn't set thequality
parameter to its property, meaning it wasn't applied in the shader, causing it to always use a Low Blur quality (unless modified post-creation).- The
BlurFXPipeline
didn't bind the quality of shader specified in the controller, meaning it always used the Low Blur shader, regardless of what the FX controller asked for. - The
FXBlurLow
fragment shader didn't have theoffset
uniform. This is now passed in and applued to the resulting blur, preventing it from creating 45 degree artifacts (thanks Wayfinder) - The
Tilemap.createFromObjects
method wouldn't always copy custom properties to the target objects or Data Manager. Fix #6391 (thanks @samme @paxperscientiam) - The
scale.min
andscale.max
width
andheight
properties in Game Config were ignored by the Game constructor, which was expectingminWidth
andminHeight
. This now matches the documnentation. Fix #6501 (thanks @NikitaShpanko @wpederzoli) - Due to a copy-paste bug, the
Actions.GetLast
function had the same code as theGetFirst
function. It now does what you'd expect it to do. Fix #6513 (thanks @dmokel) - The
TilemapLayer.PutTileAt
method would use an incorrect local GID if the Tilemap Layer wasn't using all available tilesets. Fix #5931 (thanks @christianvoigt @wjaykim) - The
TextureManager.addSpriteSheet
method would fail if aTexture
instance was given as the second parameter, throwing aCannot read property 'key' of null
(thanks @charlieschwabacher) - The
HexagonalCullBounds
function incorrectly referencedthis
within it, instead oflayer
(thanks @DaliborTrampota) - The
HexagonalGetTileCorners
function incorrectly referencedthis
within it, instead oflayer
(thanks @DaliborTrampota) - The
HexagonalTileToWorldXY
function incorrectly referencedthis
within it, instead oflayer
(thanks @DaliborTrampota) - The
BitmapText
Game Object will now reset the WebGL Texture unit on flush, which fixes an issue of a flush happened part-way during the rendering a BitmapText (thanks @EmilSV) - When using interpolation for a Particle Emitter operation, such as:
x: { values: [ 50, 500, 200, 800 ] }
it would fail to set the final value unless you specified theinterpolation
property as well. It now defaults tolinear
if not given. Fix #6551 (thanks @orcomarcio) - The Matter Physics
ignoreGravity
boolean is now checked during the Matter Engine internal functions, allowing this property to now work again. Fix #6473 (thanks @peer2p) Group.createFromConfig
will now check to see if the config contains eitherinternalCreateCallback
orinternalRemoveCallback
and set them accordingly. This fixes an issue where the callbacks would never be set if specified in an array of single configuration objects. Fix #6519 (thanks @samme)PhysicsGroup
will now set theclassType
and null theconfig
when an array of single configuration objects is given in the constructor. Fix #6519 (thanks @samme)- The
PathFollower.pathUpdate
method will now check if thetween
property has a validdata
component before running the update. This prevents a call toPathFollower.stopFollow
from throwing aCannot read properties of null (reading '0')
error as it tried to do a single update post stop. Fix #6508 (thanks @francois-dibulo)
Examples, Documentation, Beta Testing and TypeScript
My thanks to the following for helping with the Phaser 3 Examples, Beta Testing, Docs, and TypeScript definitions, either by reporting errors, fixing them, or helping author the docs:
Phaser v3.60.0
Due to the size and importance of the v3.60 release, we have split the Change Log up into multiple sections.
This makes it easier for you to browse and find the information you need.
New Features
These are the headliner features in this release:
- 14 bundled Special FX including Bloom, Blur, Distort, Glow, Wipe, and more
- Vastly improved Mobile Rendering Performance - over 7000% faster!
- New Timeline Sequencer for creating complex flows of events
- New Plane Game Object for perspective distortions
- New Nine Slice Game Object for perfect UI scaling
- Built-in Spector JS for WebGL debugging on desktop and mobile
- Brand new Video Game Object handles videos and media streams with ease
- Brand new Particle Emitter comes with explosive new features
- Support for Spatial Audio and distance-based volume
- New Spine 4 Plugin support
- Upgraded to Matter Physics v0.19
- New Tween Manager with better performance and memory management
- New Dynamic Textures for rendering to textures at runtime
- New TimeStep features and Timer Event Updates for enforcing fps rates and more
- Support for Compressed Textures
- ESM Module Support
System and Plugins
Pick any of the following sections to see the breaking changes, new features, updates, and bug fixes for that area of the API.
- Animation System
- Arcade Physics
- Bitmap and Geometry Masks
- Camera System
- Canvas Renderer
- WebGL Renderer
- Colors and Display
- Game, Device and Game Config
- Geometry, Paths and Curves
- Input System
- Loader System
- Scale Manager
- Scenes and Scene Manager
- Sound System
- Spine 3 Plugin
- Texture Manager
- Utils, Math and Actions
- Build Config and Browser Updates
Game Object Updates
Finally, here are the updates related to Game Objects:
- Bitmap Text Game Object
- Container Game Object
- Graphics Game Object
- Mesh Game Object, Vertices and Faces
- Text Game Object
- Tilemap Game Object
- All other Game Object related Updates
Examples, Documentation, Beta Testing and TypeScript
My thanks to the following for helping with the Phaser 3 Examples, Beta Testing, Docs, and TypeScript definitions, either by reporting errors, fixing them, or helping author the docs:
📖 Read the Phaser 3 API Docs 💻 Browse 2000+ Code Examples 🤝 Join the awesome Phaser Discord
Phaser v3.60 Beta 23
Version 3.60.0 - Miku - in development
New Features - Timeline Class
Phaser 3.60 has a new Timeline Class which allows for fine-grained control of sequenced events. Previously in 3.55 the Timeline was part of the Tween system and it never quite worked as intended. In 3.60 it has been removed from Tweens entirely, replaced with the much more solid and reliable Tween Chains and Timeline has now becomes its own first-class citizen within Phaser. It allows you to sequence any event you like, not just tweens.
A Timeline is a way to schedule events to happen at specific times in the future. You can think of it as an event sequencer for your game, allowing you to schedule the running of callbacks, events and other actions at specific times in the future.
A Timeline is a Scene level system, meaning you can have as many Timelines as you like, each belonging to a different Scene. You can also have multiple Timelines running at the same time.
If the Scene is paused, the Timeline will also pause. If the Scene is destroyed, the Timeline will be automatically destroyed. However, you can control the Timeline directly, pausing, resuming and stopping it at any time.
Create an instance of a Timeline via the Game Object Factory:
const timeline = this.add.timeline();
The Timeline always starts paused. You must call play
on it to start it running.
You can also pass in a configuration object on creation, or an array of them:
const timeline = this.add.timeline({
at: 1000,
run: () => {
this.add.sprite(400, 300, 'logo');
}
});
timeline.play();
In this example we sequence a few different events:
const timeline = this.add.timeline([
{
at: 1000,
run: () => { this.logo = this.add.sprite(400, 300, 'logo'); },
sound: 'TitleMusic'
},
{
at: 2500,
tween: {
targets: this.logo,
y: 600,
yoyo: true
},
sound: 'Explode'
},
{
at: 8000,
event: 'HURRY_PLAYER',
target: this.background,
set: {
tint: 0xff0000
}
}
]);
timeline.play();
There are lots of options available to you via the configuration object. See the TimelineEventConfig
typedef for more details.
New Features - ESM Support
Phaser 3.60 uses the new release of Webpack 5 in order to handle the builds. The configurations have been updated to follow the new format this upgrade introduced. As a bonus, Webpack 5 also bought a new experimental feature called 'output modules', which will take a CommonJS code-base, like Phaser uses and wrap the output in modern ES Module declarations.
We are now using this as part of our build. You will find in the dist
folder a new phaser.esm.js
file, which is also linked in from our package.json
module property. Using this build you can access any of the Phaser modules directly via named imports, meaning you can code like this:
import { AUTO, Scene, Game } from './phaser.esm.js';
class Test extends Scene
{
constructor ()
{
super();
}
create ()
{
this.add.text(10, 10, 'Welcome to Phaser ESM');
}
}
const config = {
type: AUTO,
width: 800,
height: 600,
parent: 'phaser-example',
scene: [ Test ]
};
const game = new Game(config);
Note that we're importing from the local esm bundle. By using this approach you don't need to even use a bundler for quick local prototyping or testing, you can simply import and code directly.
The dist folder still also contains phaser.js
which, as before, uses a UMD export.
Because the Webpack feature is experimental we won't make the ESM version the default just yet, but if you're curious and want to explore, please go ahead!
New Features - Built-in Special FX
We have decided to bundle a selection of highly flexible special effect shaders in to Phaser 3.60 and provide access to them via an easy to use set of API calls. The FX included are:
- Barrel - A nice pinch / bulge distortion effect.
- Bloom - Add bloom to any Game Object, with custom offset, blur strength, steps and color.
- Blur - 3 different levels of gaussian blur (low, medium and high) and custom distance and color.
- Bokeh / TiltShift - A bokeh and tiltshift effect, with intensity, contrast and distance settings.
- Circle - Add a circular ring around any Game Object, useful for masking / avatar frames, with custom color, width and background color.
- ColorMatrix - Add a ColorMatrix to any Game Object with access to all of its methods, such as
sepia
,greyscale
,lsd
and lots more. - Displacement - Use a displacement texture, such as a noise texture, to drastically (or subtly!) alter the appearance of a Game Object.
- Glow - Add a smooth inner or outer glow, with custom distance, strength and color.
- Gradient - Draw a gradient between two colors across any Game Object, with optional 'chunky' mode for classic retro style games.
- Pixelate - Make any Game Object appear pixelated, to a varying degree.
- Shadow - Add a drop shadow behind a Game Object, with custom depth and color.
- Shine - Run a 'shine' effect across a Game Object, either additively or as part of a reveal.
- Vignette - Apply a vignette around a Game Object, with custom offset position, radius and color.
- Wipe - Set a Game Object to 'wipe' or 'reveal' with custom line width, direction and axis of the effect.
What's more, the FX can be stacked up. You could add, for example, a Barrel
followed by a Blur
and then topped-off with a Circle
effect. Just by adjusting the ordering you can achieve some incredible and unique effects, very quickly.
We've worked hard to make the API as easy to use as possible, too. No more messing with pipelines or importing plugins. You can simply do:
const player = this.add.sprite(x, y, texture);
player.preFX.addGlow(0xff0000, 32);
This will add a 32 pixel red glow around the player
Sprite.
Each effect returns a new FX Controller instance, allowing you to easily adjust the special effects in real-time via your own code, tweens and similar:
const fx = container.postFX.addWipe();
this.tweens.add({
targets: fx,
progress: 1
});
This will add a Wipe Effect to a Container instance and then tween its progress value from 0 to 1, causing the wipe to play out.
All texture-based Game Objects have access to Pre FX
(so that includes Images, Sprites, TileSprites, Text, RenderTexture and Video). However, all Game Objects have access to Post FX
, as do cameras. The difference is just when the effect is applied. For a 'pre' effect, it is applied before the Game Object is drawn. For a 'post' effect, it's applied after it has been drawn. All of the same effects are available to both.
this.cameras.main.postFX.addTiltShift();
For example, this will apply a Tilt Shift effect to everything being rendered by the Camera. Which is a much faster way of doing it than applying the same effect to every child in a Scene. You can also apply them to Containers, allowing more fine-grained control over the display.
The full list of new methods are as follows:
Available only to texture-based Game Objects:
-
GameObject.preFX
an instance of the FX Controller, which allows you to add and remove Pre FX from the Game Object. It features methods such asadd
,remove
andclear
. Plus the following: -
GameObject.preFX.addGlow
adds a Glow Pre FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.preFX.addShadow
adds a Shadow Pre FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.preFX.addPixelate
adds a Pixelate Pre FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.preFX.addVignette
adds a Vignette Pre FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.preFX.addShine
adds a Shine Pre FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.preFX.addBlur
adds a Blur Pre FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.preFX.addGradient
adds a Gradient Pre FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.preFX.addBloom
adds a Bloom Pre FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.preFX.addColorMatrix
adds a ColorMatrix Pre FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.preFX.addCircle
adds a Circle Pre FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.preFX.addBarrel
adds a Barrel Pre FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.preFX.addDisplacement
adds a Displacement Pre FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.preFX.addWipe
adds a Wipe Pre FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.preFX.addReveal
adds a Reveal Pre FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.preFX.addBokeh
adds a Bokeh Pre FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.preFX.addTiltShift
adds a TiltShift Pre FX effect to the Game Object.
Available to all Game Objects:
-
GameObject.clearFX
removes both Pre and Post FX from the Game Object. -
GameObject.postFX
an instance of the FX Controller, which allows you to add and remove Post FX from the Game Object. It features methods such asadd
,remove
andclear
. Plus the following: -
GameObject.postFX.addGlow
adds a Glow Post FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.postFX.addShadow
adds a Shadow Post FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.postFX.addPixelate
adds a Pixelate Post FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.postFX.addVignette
adds a Vignette Post FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.postFX.addShine
adds a Shine Post FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.postFX.addBlur
adds a Blur Post FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.postFX.addGradient
adds a Gradient Post FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.postFX.addBloom
adds a Bloom Post FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.postFX.addColorMatrix
adds a ColorMatrix Post FX effect to the Game Object. -
GameObject.postFX.addCircle
adds a Circl...
Phaser v3.60.0 Beta 22
Version 3.60.0 - Miku - in development
New Features - Timeline Class
Phaser 3.60 has a new Timeline Class which allows for fine-grained control of sequenced events. Previously in 3.55 the Timeline was part of the Tween system and it never quite worked as intended. In 3.60 it has been removed from Tweens entirely, replaced with the much more solid and reliable Tween Chains and Timeline has now becomes its own first-class citizen within Phaser. It allows you to sequence any event you like, not just tweens.
A Timeline is a way to schedule events to happen at specific times in the future. You can think of it as an event sequencer for your game, allowing you to schedule the running of callbacks, events and other actions at specific times in the future.
A Timeline is a Scene level system, meaning you can have as many Timelines as you like, each belonging to a different Scene. You can also have multiple Timelines running at the same time.
If the Scene is paused, the Timeline will also pause. If the Scene is destroyed, the Timeline will be automatically destroyed. However, you can control the Timeline directly, pausing, resuming and stopping it at any time.
Create an instance of a Timeline via the Game Object Factory:
const timeline = this.add.timeline();
The Timeline always starts paused. You must call play
on it to start it running.
You can also pass in a configuration object on creation, or an array of them:
const timeline = this.add.timeline({
at: 1000,
run: () => {
this.add.sprite(400, 300, 'logo');
}
});
timeline.play();
In this example we sequence a few different events:
const timeline = this.add.timeline([
{
at: 1000,
run: () => { this.logo = this.add.sprite(400, 300, 'logo'); },
sound: 'TitleMusic'
},
{
at: 2500,
tween: {
targets: this.logo,
y: 600,
yoyo: true
},
sound: 'Explode'
},
{
at: 8000,
event: 'HURRY_PLAYER',
target: this.background,
set: {
tint: 0xff0000
}
}
]);
timeline.play();
There are lots of options available to you via the configuration object. See the TimelineEventConfig
typedef for more details.
New Features - ESM Support
Phaser 3.60 uses the new release of Webpack 5 in order to handle the builds. The configurations have been updated to follow the new format this upgrade introduced. As a bonus, Webpack 5 also bought a new experimental feature called 'output modules', which will take a CommonJS code-base, like Phaser uses and wrap the output in modern ES Module declarations.
We are now using this as part of our build. You will find in the dist
folder a new phaser.esm.js
file, which is also linked in from our package.json
module property. Using this build you can access any of the Phaser modules directly via named imports, meaning you can code like this:
import { AUTO, Scene, Game } from './phaser.esm.js';
class Test extends Scene
{
constructor ()
{
super();
}
create ()
{
this.add.text(10, 10, 'Welcome to Phaser ESM');
}
}
const config = {
type: AUTO,
width: 800,
height: 600,
parent: 'phaser-example',
scene: [ Test ]
};
const game = new Game(config);
Note that we're importing from the local esm bundle. By using this approach you don't need to even use a bundler for quick local prototyping or testing, you can simply import and code directly.
The dist folder still also contains phaser.js
which, as before, uses a UMD export.
Because the Webpack feature is experimental we won't make the ESM version the default just yet, but if you're curious and want to explore, please go ahead!
New Features - Built-in Special FX
We have decided to bundle a selection of highly flexible special effect shaders in to Phaser 3.60 and provide access to them via an easy to use set of API calls. The FX included are:
- Barrel - A nice pinch / bulge distortion effect.
- Bloom - Add bloom to any Game Object, with custom offset, blur strength, steps and color.
- Blur - 3 different levels of gaussian blur (low, medium and high) and custom distance and color.
- Bokeh / TiltShift - A bokeh and tiltshift effect, with intensity, contrast and distance settings.
- Circle - Add a circular ring around any Game Object, useful for masking / avatar frames, with custom color, width and background color.
- ColorMatrix - Add a ColorMatrix to any Game Object with access to all of its methods, such as
sepia
,greyscale
,lsd
and lots more. - Displacement - Use a displacement texture, such as a noise texture, to drastically (or subtly!) alter the appearance of a Game Object.
- Glow - Add a smooth inner or outer glow, with custom distance, strength and color.
- Gradient - Draw a gradient between two colors across any Game Object, with optional 'chunky' mode for classic retro style games.
- Pixelate - Make any Game Object appear pixelated, to a varying degree.
- Shadow - Add a drop shadow behind a Game Object, with custom depth and color.
- Shine - Run a 'shine' effect across a Game Object, either additively or as part of a reveal.
- Vignette - Apply a vignette around a Game Object, with custom offset position, radius and color.
- Wipe - Set a Game Object to 'wipe' or 'reveal' with custom line width, direction and axis of the effect.
What's more, the FX can be stacked up. You could add, for example, a Barrel
followed by a Blur
and then topped-off with a Circle
effect. Just by adjusting the ordering you can achieve some incredible and unique effects, very quickly.
We've worked hard to make the API as easy to use as possible, too. No more messing with pipelines or importing plugins. You can simply do:
const player = this.add.sprite(x, y, texture);
player.preFX.addGlow(0xff0000, 32);
This will add a 32 pixel red glow around the player
Sprite.
Each effect returns a new FX Controller instance, allowing you to easily adjust the special effects in real-time via your own code, tweens and similar:
const fx = container.postFX.addWipe();
this.tweens.add({
targets: fx,
progress: 1
});
This will add a Wipe Effect to a Container instance and then tween its progress value from 0 to 1, causing the wipe to play out.
All texture-based Game Objects have access to Pre FX
(so that includes Images, Sprites, TileSprites, Text, RenderTexture and Video). However, all Game Objects have access to Post FX
, as do cameras. The difference is just when the effect is applied. For a 'pre' effect, it is applied before the Game Object is drawn. For a 'post' effect, it's applied after it has been drawn. All of the same effects are available to both.
this.cameras.main.postFX.addTiltShift();
For example, this will apply a Tilt Shift effect to everything being rendered by the Camera. Which is a much faster way of doing it than applying the same effect to every child in a Scene. You can also apply them to Containers, allowing more fine-grained control over the display.
The full list of new methods are as follows:
Available only to texture-based Game Objects:
GameObject.preFX.addGlow
adds a Glow Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addShadow
adds a Shadow Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addPixelate
adds a Pixelate Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addVignette
adds a Vignette Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addShine
adds a Shine Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addBlur
adds a Blur Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addGradient
adds a Gradient Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addBloom
adds a Bloom Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addColorMatrix
adds a ColorMatrix Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addCircle
adds a Circle Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addBarrel
adds a Barrel Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addDisplacement
adds a Displacement Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addWipe
adds a Wipe Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addReveal
adds a Reveal Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addBokeh
adds a Bokeh Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addTiltShift
adds a TiltShift Pre FX effect to the Game Object.
Available to all Game Objects:
GameObject.postFX.addGlow
adds a Glow Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addShadow
adds a Shadow Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addPixelate
adds a Pixelate Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addVignette
adds a Vignette Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addShine
adds a Shine Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addBlur
adds a Blur Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addGradient
adds a Gradient Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addBloom
adds a Bloom Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addColorMatrix
adds a ColorMatrix Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addCircle
adds a Circle Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addBarrel
adds a Barrel Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addDisplacement
adds a Displacement Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addWipe
adds a Wipe Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addReveal
adds a Reveal Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addBokeh
adds a Bokeh Post FX effect to the Game Object.- `GameObject.postFX.ad...
Phaser 3.60.0 Beta 21
Version 3.60.0 - Miku - in development
New Features - ESM Support
Phaser 3.60 uses the new release of Webpack 5 in order to handle the builds. The configurations have been updated to follow the new format this upgrade introduced. As a bonus, Webpack 5 also bought a new experimental feature called 'output modules', which will take a CommonJS code-base, like Phaser uses and wrap the output in modern ES Module declarations.
We are now using this as part of our build. You will find in the dist
folder a new phaser.esm.js
file, which is also linked in from our package.json
module property. Using this build you can access any of the Phaser modules directly via named imports, meaning you can code like this:
import { AUTO, Scene, Game } from './phaser.esm.js';
class Test extends Scene
{
constructor ()
{
super();
}
create ()
{
this.add.text(10, 10, 'Welcome to Phaser ESM');
}
}
const config = {
type: AUTO,
width: 800,
height: 600,
parent: 'phaser-example',
scene: [ Test ]
};
const game = new Game(config);
Note that we're importing from the local esm bundle. By using this approach you don't need to even use a bundler for quick local prototyping or testing, you can simply import and code directly.
The dist folder still also contains phaser.js
which, as before, uses a UMD export.
Because the Webpack feature is experimental we won't make the ESM version the default just yet, but if you're curious and want to explore, please go ahead!
New Features - Built-in Special FX
We have decided to bundle a selection of highly flexible special effect shaders in to Phaser 3.60 and provide access to them via an easy to use set of API calls. The FX included are:
- Barrel - A nice pinch / bulge distortion effect.
- Bloom - Add bloom to any Game Object, with custom offset, blur strength, steps and color.
- Blur - 3 different levels of gaussian blur (low, medium and high) and custom distance and color.
- Bokeh / TiltShift - A bokeh and tiltshift effect, with intensity, contrast and distance settings.
- Circle - Add a circular ring around any Game Object, useful for masking / avatar frames, with custom color, width and background color.
- ColorMatrix - Add a ColorMatrix to any Game Object with access to all of its methods, such as
sepia
,greyscale
,lsd
and lots more. - Displacement - Use a displacement texture, such as a noise texture, to drastically (or subtly!) alter the appearance of a Game Object.
- Glow - Add a smooth inner or outer glow, with custom distance, strength and color.
- Gradient - Draw a gradient between two colors across any Game Object, with optional 'chunky' mode for classic retro style games.
- Pixelate - Make any Game Object appear pixelated, to a varying degree.
- Shadow - Add a drop shadow behind a Game Object, with custom depth and color.
- Shine - Run a 'shine' effect across a Game Object, either additively or as part of a reveal.
- Vignette - Apply a vignette around a Game Object, with custom offset position, radius and color.
- Wipe - Set a Game Object to 'wipe' or 'reveal' with custom line width, direction and axis of the effect.
What's more, the FX can be stacked up. You could add, for example, a Barrel
followed by a Blur
and then topped-off with a Circle
effect. Just by adjusting the ordering you can achieve some incredible and unique effects, very quickly.
We've worked hard to make the API as easy to use as possible, too. No more messing with pipelines or importing plugins. You can simply do:
const player = this.add.sprite(x, y, texture);
player.preFX.addGlow(0xff0000, 32);
This will add a 32 pixel red glow around the player
Sprite.
Each effect returns a new FX Controller instance, allowing you to easily adjust the special effects in real-time via your own code, tweens and similar:
const fx = container.postFX.addWipe();
this.tweens.add({
targets: fx,
progress: 1
});
This will add a Wipe Effect to a Container instance and then tween its progress value from 0 to 1, causing the wipe to play out.
All texture-based Game Objects have access to Pre FX
(so that includes Images, Sprites, TileSprites, Text, RenderTexture and Video). However, all Game Objects have access to Post FX
, as do cameras. The difference is just when the effect is applied. For a 'pre' effect, it is applied before the Game Object is drawn. For a 'post' effect, it's applied after it has been drawn. All of the same effects are available to both.
this.cameras.main.postFX.addTiltShift();
For example, this will apply a Tilt Shift effect to everything being rendered by the Camera. Which is a much faster way of doing it than applying the same effect to every child in a Scene. You can also apply them to Containers, allowing more fine-grained control over the display.
The full list of new methods are as follows:
Available only to texture-based Game Objects:
GameObject.preFX.addGlow
adds a Glow Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addShadow
adds a Shadow Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addPixelate
adds a Pixelate Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addVignette
adds a Vignette Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addShine
adds a Shine Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addBlur
adds a Blur Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addGradient
adds a Gradient Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addBloom
adds a Bloom Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addColorMatrix
adds a ColorMatrix Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addCircle
adds a Circle Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addBarrel
adds a Barrel Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addDisplacement
adds a Displacement Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addWipe
adds a Wipe Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addReveal
adds a Reveal Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addBokeh
adds a Bokeh Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addTiltShift
adds a TiltShift Pre FX effect to the Game Object.
Available to all Game Objects:
GameObject.postFX.addGlow
adds a Glow Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addShadow
adds a Shadow Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addPixelate
adds a Pixelate Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addVignette
adds a Vignette Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addShine
adds a Shine Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addBlur
adds a Blur Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addGradient
adds a Gradient Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addBloom
adds a Bloom Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addColorMatrix
adds a ColorMatrix Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addCircle
adds a Circle Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addBarrel
adds a Barrel Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addDisplacement
adds a Displacement Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addWipe
adds a Wipe Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addReveal
adds a Reveal Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addBokeh
adds a Bokeh Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addTiltShift
adds a TiltShift Post FX effect to the Game Object.
New Features - Spatial Sound
Thanks to a contribution from @alxwest the Web Audio Sound system now supports spatial sound.
TODO - List all of the new properties and methods!
New Features - Spine 4 Support
Thanks to a contribution from @justintien we now have a Spine 4 Plugin available.
You can find it in the plugins/spine4.1
folder in the main repository. There are also a bunch of new npm scripts to help build this plugin:
npm run plugin.spine4.1.full.dist
- To build new dist files for both canvas and WebGL.
npm run plugin.spine4.1.dist
- To build new dist files.
npm run plugin.spine4.1.watch
- To enter watch mode when doing dev work on the plugin.
npm run plugin.spine4.1.runtimes
- To build new versions of the Spine 4 runtimes.
The core plugin API remains largely the same. You can find lots of updated examples in the Phaser 3 Examples repo in the 3.60/spine4.1
folder.
We will maintain both the Spine 3 and 4 plugins for the forseeable future.
Additional Spine 3 Bug Fixes
- Using
drawDebug
on a Spine Game Object to view its skeleton would cause the next object in the display list to be skipped for rendering, if it wasn't a Spine Game Object too. This is because the Spine 3 skeleton debug draw ends the spine batch but the Scene Renderer wasn't rebound. Fix #6380 (thanks @spayton) - The Spine Plugin
add
andmake
functions didn't clear and rebind the WebGL pipeline. This could cause two different visual issues: The first is that a Phaser Game Object (such as a Sprite) could be seen to change its texture to display the Spine atlas texture instead for a single frame, and then on the next pass revert back to normal again. The second issue is that if the Spine skeleton wasn't added to the display list, but just created (viaaddToScene: false
) then the Sprite would take on the texture frame entirely from that point on. Fix #6362 (thanks @frissonlabs) - Previously, it wasn't possible for multiple Spine Atlases to use PNGs with the exact same filename, even if they were in different folders. The
SpineFile
loader has now been updated so that the always-unique Spine key is pre-pended to the filename, for example if the key wasbonus
and the PNG in the at...
Phaser 3.60.0 Beta 20
Version 3.60.0 - Miku - in development
New Features - Built-in Special FX
We have decided to bundle a selection of highly flexible special effect shaders in to Phaser 3.60 and provide access to them via an easy to use set of API calls. The FX included are:
- Barrel - A nice pinch / bulge distortion effect.
- Bloom - Add bloom to any Game Object, with custom offset, blur strength, steps and color.
- Blur - 3 different levels of gaussian blur (low, medium and high) and custom distance and color.
- Bokeh / TiltShift - A bokeh and tiltshift effect, with intensity, contrast and distance settings.
- Circle - Add a circular ring around any Game Object, useful for masking / avatar frames, with custom color, width and background color.
- ColorMatrix - Add a ColorMatrix to any Game Object with access to all of its methods, such as
sepia
,greyscale
,lsd
and lots more. - Displacement - Use a displacement texture, such as a noise texture, to drastically (or subtly!) alter the appearance of a Game Object.
- Glow - Add a smooth inner or outer glow, with custom distance, strength and color.
- Gradient - Draw a gradient between two colors across any Game Object, with optional 'chunky' mode for classic retro style games.
- Pixelate - Make any Game Object appear pixelated, to a varying degree.
- Shadow - Add a drop shadow behind a Game Object, with custom depth and color.
- Shine - Run a 'shine' effect across a Game Object, either additively or as part of a reveal.
- Vignette - Apply a vignette around a Game Object, with custom offset position, radius and color.
- Wipe - Set a Game Object to 'wipe' or 'reveal' with custom line width, direction and axis of the effect.
What's more, the FX can be stacked up. You could add, for example, a Barrel
followed by a Blur
and then topped-off with a Circle
effect. Just by adjusting the ordering you can achieve some incredible and unique effects, very quickly.
We've worked hard to make the API as easy to use as possible, too. No more messing with pipelines or importing plugins. You can simply do:
const player = this.add.sprite(x, y, texture);
player.preFX.addGlow(0xff0000, 32);
This will add a 32 pixel red glow around the player
Sprite.
Each effect returns a new FX Controller instance, allowing you to easily adjust the special effects in real-time via your own code, tweens and similar:
const fx = container.postFX.addWipe();
this.tweens.add({
targets: fx,
progress: 1
});
This will add a Wipe Effect to a Container instance and then tween its progress value from 0 to 1, causing the wipe to play out.
All texture-based Game Objects have access to Pre FX
(so that includes Images, Sprites, TileSprites, Text, RenderTexture and Video). However, all Game Objects have access to Post FX
, as do cameras. The difference is just when the effect is applied. For a 'pre' effect, it is applied before the Game Object is drawn. For a 'post' effect, it's applied after it has been drawn. All of the same effects are available to both.
this.cameras.main.postFX.addTiltShift();
For example, this will apply a Tilt Shift effect to everything being rendered by the Camera. Which is a much faster way of doing it than applying the same effect to every child in a Scene. You can also apply them to Containers, allowing more fine-grained control over the display.
The full list of new methods are as follows:
Available only to texture-based Game Objects:
GameObject.preFX.addGlow
adds a Glow Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addShadow
adds a Shadow Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addPixelate
adds a Pixelate Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addVignette
adds a Vignette Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addShine
adds a Shine Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addBlur
adds a Blur Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addGradient
adds a Gradient Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addBloom
adds a Bloom Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addColorMatrix
adds a ColorMatrix Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addCircle
adds a Circle Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addBarrel
adds a Barrel Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addDisplacement
adds a Displacement Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addWipe
adds a Wipe Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addReveal
adds a Reveal Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addBokeh
adds a Bokeh Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addTiltShift
adds a TiltShift Pre FX effect to the Game Object.
Available to all Game Objects:
GameObject.postFX.addGlow
adds a Glow Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addShadow
adds a Shadow Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addPixelate
adds a Pixelate Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addVignette
adds a Vignette Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addShine
adds a Shine Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addBlur
adds a Blur Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addGradient
adds a Gradient Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addBloom
adds a Bloom Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addColorMatrix
adds a ColorMatrix Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addCircle
adds a Circle Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addBarrel
adds a Barrel Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addDisplacement
adds a Displacement Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addWipe
adds a Wipe Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addReveal
adds a Reveal Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addBokeh
adds a Bokeh Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addTiltShift
adds a TiltShift Post FX effect to the Game Object.
New Features - Spatial Sound
Thanks to a contribution from @alxwest the Web Audio Sound system now supports spatial sound.
TODO - List all of the new properties and methods!
New Features - Spine 4 Support
Thanks to a contribution from @justintien we now have a Spine 4 Plugin available.
You can find it in the plugins/spine4.1
folder in the main repository. There are also a bunch of new npm scripts to help build this plugin:
npm run plugin.spine4.1.full.dist
- To build new dist files for both canvas and WebGL.
npm run plugin.spine4.1.dist
- To build new dist files.
npm run plugin.spine4.1.watch
- To enter watch mode when doing dev work on the plugin.
npm run plugin.spine4.1.runtimes
- To build new versions of the Spine 4 runtimes.
The core plugin API remains largely the same. You can find lots of updated examples in the Phaser 3 Examples repo in the 3.60/spine4.1
folder.
We will maintain both the Spine 3 and 4 plugins for the forseeable future.
Additional Spine 3 Bug Fixes
- Using
drawDebug
on a Spine Game Object to view its skeleton would cause the next object in the display list to be skipped for rendering, if it wasn't a Spine Game Object too. This is because the Spine 3 skeleton debug draw ends the spine batch but the Scene Renderer wasn't rebound. Fix #6380 (thanks @spayton) - The Spine Plugin
add
andmake
functions didn't clear and rebind the WebGL pipeline. This could cause two different visual issues: The first is that a Phaser Game Object (such as a Sprite) could be seen to change its texture to display the Spine atlas texture instead for a single frame, and then on the next pass revert back to normal again. The second issue is that if the Spine skeleton wasn't added to the display list, but just created (viaaddToScene: false
) then the Sprite would take on the texture frame entirely from that point on. Fix #6362 (thanks @frissonlabs) - Previously, it wasn't possible for multiple Spine Atlases to use PNGs with the exact same filename, even if they were in different folders. The
SpineFile
loader has now been updated so that the always-unique Spine key is pre-pended to the filename, for example if the key wasbonus
and the PNG in the atlas wascoin.png
then the final key (as stored in the Texture Manager) is nowbonus:coin.png
. TheSpinePlugin.getAtlasCanvas
andgetAtlasWebGL
methods have been updated to reflect this change. Fix #6022 (thanks @orjandh) - If a
SpineContainer
had a mask applied to it and the next immediate item on the display list was another Spine object (outside of the Container) then it would fail to rebind the WebGL pipeline, causing the mask to break. It will now rebind the renderer at the end of the SpineContainer batch, no matter what, if it has a mask. Fix #5627 (thanks @FloodGames)
New Features - Plane Game Object
Phaser v3.60 contains a new native Plane Game Object. The Plane Game Object is a helper class that takes the Mesh Game Object and extends it, allowing for fast and easy creation of Planes. A Plane is a one-sided grid of cells, where you specify the number of cells in each dimension. The Plane can have a texture that is either repeated (tiled) across each cell, or applied to the full Plane.
The Plane can then be manipulated in 3D space, with rotation across all 3 axis.
This allows you to create effects not possible with regular Sprites, such as perspective distortion. You can also adjust the vertices on a per-vertex basis. Plane data becomes part of the WebGL batch, just like standard Sprites, so doesn't introduce any additional shader overhead. Because the Plane just generates vertices into the WebGL batch, like any other Sprite, you can use all of the common Game Object components o...
Phaser 3.60 Beta 19
Version 3.60.0 - Miku - in development
New Features - Built-in Special FX
We have decided to bundle a selection of highly flexible special effect shaders in to Phaser 3.60 and provide access to them via an easy to use set of API calls. The FX included are:
- Barrel - A nice pinch / bulge distortion effect.
- Bloom - Add bloom to any Game Object, with custom offset, blur strength, steps and color.
- Blur - 3 different levels of gaussian blur (low, medium and high) and custom distance and color.
- Bokeh / TiltShift - A bokeh and tiltshift effect, with intensity, contrast and distance settings.
- Circle - Add a circular ring around any Game Object, useful for masking / avatar frames, with custom color, width and background color.
- ColorMatrix - Add a ColorMatrix to any Game Object with access to all of its methods, such as
sepia
,greyscale
,lsd
and lots more. - Displacement - Use a displacement texture, such as a noise texture, to drastically (or subtly!) alter the appearance of a Game Object.
- Glow - Add a smooth inner or outer glow, with custom distance, strength and color.
- Gradient - Draw a gradient between two colors across any Game Object, with optional 'chunky' mode for classic retro style games.
- Pixelate - Make any Game Object appear pixelated, to a varying degree.
- Shadow - Add a drop shadow behind a Game Object, with custom depth and color.
- Shine - Run a 'shine' effect across a Game Object, either additively or as part of a reveal.
- Vignette - Apply a vignette around a Game Object, with custom offset position, radius and color.
- Wipe - Set a Game Object to 'wipe' or 'reveal' with custom line width, direction and axis of the effect.
What's more, the FX can be stacked up. You could add, for example, a Barrel
followed by a Blur
and then topped-off with a Circle
effect. Just by adjusting the ordering you can achieve some incredible and unique effects, very quickly.
We've worked hard to make the API as easy to use as possible, too. No more messing with pipelines or importing plugins. You can simply do:
const player = this.add.sprite(x, y, texture);
player.preFX.addGlow(0xff0000, 32);
This will add a 32 pixel red glow around the player
Sprite.
Each effect returns a new FX Controller instance, allowing you to easily adjust the special effects in real-time via your own code, tweens and similar:
const fx = container.postFX.addWipe();
this.tweens.add({
targets: fx,
progress: 1
});
This will add a Wipe Effect to a Container instance and then tween its progress value from 0 to 1, causing the wipe to play out.
All texture-based Game Objects have access to Pre FX
(so that includes Images, Sprites, TileSprites, Text, RenderTexture and Video). However, all Game Objects have access to Post FX
, as do cameras. The difference is just when the effect is applied. For a 'pre' effect, it is applied before the Game Object is drawn. For a 'post' effect, it's applied after it has been drawn. All of the same effects are available to both.
this.cameras.main.postFX.addTiltShift();
For example, this will apply a Tilt Shift effect to everything being rendered by the Camera. Which is a much faster way of doing it than applying the same effect to every child in a Scene. You can also apply them to Containers, allowing more fine-grained control over the display.
The full list of new methods are as follows:
Available only to texture-based Game Objects:
GameObject.preFX.addGlow
adds a Glow Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addShadow
adds a Shadow Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addPixelate
adds a Pixelate Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addVignette
adds a Vignette Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addShine
adds a Shine Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addBlur
adds a Blur Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addGradient
adds a Gradient Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addBloom
adds a Bloom Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addColorMatrix
adds a ColorMatrix Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addCircle
adds a Circle Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addBarrel
adds a Barrel Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addDisplacement
adds a Displacement Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addWipe
adds a Wipe Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addReveal
adds a Reveal Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addBokeh
adds a Bokeh Pre FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.preFX.addTiltShift
adds a TiltShift Pre FX effect to the Game Object.
Available to all Game Objects:
GameObject.postFX.addGlow
adds a Glow Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addShadow
adds a Shadow Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addPixelate
adds a Pixelate Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addVignette
adds a Vignette Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addShine
adds a Shine Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addBlur
adds a Blur Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addGradient
adds a Gradient Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addBloom
adds a Bloom Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addColorMatrix
adds a ColorMatrix Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addCircle
adds a Circle Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addBarrel
adds a Barrel Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addDisplacement
adds a Displacement Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addWipe
adds a Wipe Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addReveal
adds a Reveal Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addBokeh
adds a Bokeh Post FX effect to the Game Object.GameObject.postFX.addTiltShift
adds a TiltShift Post FX effect to the Game Object.
New Features - Spatial Sound
Thanks to a contribution from @alxwest the Web Audio Sound system now supports spatial sound.
TODO - List all of the new properties and methods!
New Features - Spine 4 Support
Thanks to a contribution from @justintien we now have a Spine 4 Plugin available.
You can find it in the plugins/spine4.1
folder in the main repository. There are also a bunch of new npm scripts to help build this plugin:
npm run plugin.spine4.1.full.dist
- To build new dist files for both canvas and WebGL.
npm run plugin.spine4.1.dist
- To build new dist files.
npm run plugin.spine4.1.watch
- To enter watch mode when doing dev work on the plugin.
npm run plugin.spine4.1.runtimes
- To build new versions of the Spine 4 runtimes.
The core plugin API remains largely the same. You can find lots of updated examples in the Phaser 3 Examples repo in the 3.60/spine4.1
folder.
We will maintain both the Spine 3 and 4 plugins for the forseeable future.
Additional Spine 3 Bug Fixes
- Using
drawDebug
on a Spine Game Object to view its skeleton would cause the next object in the display list to be skipped for rendering, if it wasn't a Spine Game Object too. This is because the Spine 3 skeleton debug draw ends the spine batch but the Scene Renderer wasn't rebound. Fix #6380 (thanks @spayton) - The Spine Plugin
add
andmake
functions didn't clear and rebind the WebGL pipeline. This could cause two different visual issues: The first is that a Phaser Game Object (such as a Sprite) could be seen to change its texture to display the Spine atlas texture instead for a single frame, and then on the next pass revert back to normal again. The second issue is that if the Spine skeleton wasn't added to the display list, but just created (viaaddToScene: false
) then the Sprite would take on the texture frame entirely from that point on. Fix #6362 (thanks @frissonlabs) - Previously, it wasn't possible for multiple Spine Atlases to use PNGs with the exact same filename, even if they were in different folders. The
SpineFile
loader has now been updated so that the always-unique Spine key is pre-pended to the filename, for example if the key wasbonus
and the PNG in the atlas wascoin.png
then the final key (as stored in the Texture Manager) is nowbonus:coin.png
. TheSpinePlugin.getAtlasCanvas
andgetAtlasWebGL
methods have been updated to reflect this change. Fix #6022 (thanks @orjandh) - If a
SpineContainer
had a mask applied to it and the next immediate item on the display list was another Spine object (outside of the Container) then it would fail to rebind the WebGL pipeline, causing the mask to break. It will now rebind the renderer at the end of the SpineContainer batch, no matter what, if it has a mask. Fix #5627 (thanks @FloodGames)
New Features - Plane Game Object
Phaser v3.60 contains a new native Plane Game Object. The Plane Game Object is a helper class that takes the Mesh Game Object and extends it, allowing for fast and easy creation of Planes. A Plane is a one-sided grid of cells, where you specify the number of cells in each dimension. The Plane can have a texture that is either repeated (tiled) across each cell, or applied to the full Plane.
The Plane can then be manipulated in 3D space, with rotation across all 3 axis.
This allows you to create effects not possible with regular Sprites, such as perspective distortion. You can also adjust the vertices on a per-vertex basis. Plane data becomes part of the WebGL batch, just like standard Sprites, so doesn't introduce any additional shader overhead. Because the Plane just generates vertices into the WebGL batch, like any other Sprite, you can use all of the common Game Object components o...
Phaser 3.60 Beta 18
Version 3.60.0 - Miku - in development
New Features - Nine Slice Game Object
Phaser 3.60 contains a new native Nine Slice Game Object. A Nine Slice Game Object allows you to display a texture-based object that can be stretched both horizontally and vertically, but that retains fixed-sized corners. The dimensions of the corners are set via the parameters to the class. When you resize a Nine Slice Game Object only the middle sections of the texture stretch. This is extremely useful for UI and button-like elements, where you need them to expand to accommodate the content without distorting the texture.
The texture you provide for this Game Object should be based on the following layout structure:
A B
+---+----------------------+---+
C | 1 | 2 | 3 |
+---+----------------------+---+
| | | |
| 4 | 5 | 6 |
| | | |
+---+----------------------+---+
D | 7 | 8 | 9 |
+---+----------------------+---+
When changing this objects width and / or height:
areas 1, 3, 7 and 9 (the corners) will remain unscaled
areas 2 and 8 will be stretched horizontally only
areas 4 and 6 will be stretched vertically only
area 5 will be stretched both horizontally and vertically
You can also create a 3 slice Game Object:
This works in a similar way, except you can only stretch it horizontally. Therefore, it requires less configuration:
A B
+---+----------------------+---+
| | | |
C | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| | | |
+---+----------------------+---+
When changing this objects width (you cannot change its height)
areas 1 and 3 will remain unscaled
area 2 will be stretched horizontally
The above configuration concept is adapted from the Pixi NineSlicePlane.
To specify a 3 slice object instead of a 9 slice you should only provide the leftWidth
and rightWidth
parameters. To create a 9 slice
you must supply all parameters.
The minimum width this Game Object can be is the total of leftWidth
+ rightWidth
. The minimum height this Game Object
can be is the total of topHeight
+ bottomHeight
. If you need to display this object at a smaller size, you can scale it.
In terms of performance, using a 3 slice Game Object is the equivalent of having 3 Sprites in a row. Using a 9 slice Game Object is the equivalent
of having 9 Sprites in a row. The vertices of this object are all batched together and can co-exist with other Sprites and graphics on the display
list, without incurring any additional overhead.
As of Phaser 3.60 this Game Object is WebGL only. Please see the new examples and documentation for how to use it.
New Features - Sprite FX
- When defining the
renderTargets
in a WebGL Pipeline config, you can now set optionalwidth
andheight
properties, which will create a Render Target of that exact size, ignoring thescale
value (if also given). WebGLPipeline.isSpriteFX
is a new boolean property that defines if the pipeline is a Sprite FX Pipeline, or not. The default isfalse
.GameObjects.Components.FX
is a new component that provides access to FX specific properties and methods. The Image and Sprite Game Objects have this component by default.fxPadding
and its related methodsetFXPadding
allow you to set extra padding to be added to the texture the Game Object renders with. This is especially useful for Sprite FX shaders that modify the sprite beyond its bounds, such as glow or shadow effects.- The
WebGLPipeline.setShader
method has a new optional parameterbuffer
that allows you to set the vertex buffer to be bound before the shader is activated. - The
WebGLPipeline.setVertexBuffer
method has a new optional parameterbuffer
that allows you to set the vertex buffer to be bound if you don't want to bind the default one. - The
WebGLRenderer.createTextureFromSource
method has a new optional boolean parameterforceClamp
that will for the clamp wrapping mode even if the texture is a power-of-two. RenderTarget
will now automatically set the wrapping mode to clamp.WebGLPipeline.flipProjectionMatrix
is a new method that allows you to flip the y and bottom projection matrix values via a parameter.PipelineManager.renderTargets
is a new property that holds an array ofRenderTarget
objects that allSpriteFX
pipelines can share, to keep texture memory as low as possible.PipelineManager.maxDimension
is a new property that holds the largest possible target dimension.PipelineManager.frameInc
is a new property that holds the amount theRenderTarget
s will increase in size in each iteration. The default value is 32, meaning it will create targets of size 32, 64, 96, etc. You can control this via the pipeline config object.PipelineManager.targetIndex
is a new property that holds the internal target array offset index. Treat it as read-only.- The Pipeline Manager will now create a bunch of
RenderTarget
objects during itsboot
method. These are sized incrementally from 32px and up (use theframeInc
value to alter this). These targets are shared by all Sprite FX Pipelines. PipelineManager.getRenderTarget
is a new method that will return the aRenderTarget
that best fits the dimensions given. This is typically called by Sprite FX Pipelines, rather than directly.PipelineManager.getSwapRenderTarget
is a new method that will return a 'swap'RenderTarget
that matches the size of the main target. This is called by Sprite FX pipelines and not typically called directly.PipelineManager.getAltSwapRenderTarget
is a new method that will return a 'alternative swap'RenderTarget
that matches the size of the main target. This is called by Sprite FX pipelines and not typically called directly.
New Features - Compressed Texture Support
Phaser 3.60 contains support for Compressed Textures. It can parse both KTX and PVR containers and within those has support for the following formats: ETC, ETC1, ATC, ASTC, BPTC, RGTC, PVRTC, S3TC and S3TCSRB. Compressed Textures differ from normal textures in that their structure is optimized for fast GPU data reads and lower memory consumption. Popular tools that can create compressed textures include PVRTexTool, ASTC Encoder and Texture Packer.
Compressed Textures are loaded using the new this.load.texture
method, which takes a texture configuration object that maps the formats to the files. The browser will then download the first file in the object that it knows it can support. You can also provide Texture Atlas JSON data, or Multi Atlas JSON data, too, so you can use compressed texture atlases. Currently, Texture Packer is the best tool for creating these type of files.
TextureSoure.compressionAlgorithm
is now populated with the compression format used by the texture.Types.Textures.CompressedTextureData
is the new compressed texture configuration object type.TextureManager.addCompressedTexture
is a new method that will add a compressed texture, and optionally atlas data into the Texture Manager and return aTexture
object than any Sprite can use.Textures.Parsers.KTXParser
is a new parser for the KTX compression container format.Textures.Parsers.PVRParser
is a new parser for the PVR compression container format.- The
WebGLRenderer.compression
property now holds a more in-depth object containing supported compression formats. - The
WebGLRenderer.createTextureFromSource
method now accepts theCompressedTextureData
data objects and creates WebGL textures from them. WebGLRenderer.getCompressedTextures
is a new method that will populate theWebGLRenderer.compression
object and return its value. This is called automatically when the renderer boots.WebGLRenderer.getCompressedTextureName
is a new method that will return a compressed texture format GLenum based on the given format.
New Features - Updated Particle System
The Particle system has been mostly rewritten to give it a much needed overhaul. This makes the API cleaner, the Game Objects a lot more memory efficient and also introduces several great new features. In order to do this, we had to make some breaking changes. The largest being the way in which particles are now created.
Previously when you used the this.add.particles
command it would create a ParticleEmitterManager
instance. You would then use this to create an Emitter, which would actually emit the particles. While this worked and did allow a Manager to control multiple emitters we found that in discussion developers seldom used this feature and it was common for a Manager to own just one single Emitter.
In order to streamline memory and the display list we have removed the ParticleEmitterManager
entirely. When you call this.add.particles
you're now creating a ParticleEmitter
instance, which is being added directly to the display list and can be manipulated just like any other Game Object, i.e. scaled, rotated, positioned, added to a Container, etc. It now extends the GameObject
base class, meaning it's also an event emitter, which allowed us to create some handy new events for particles.
So, to create an emitter, you now give it an xy coordinate, a texture and an emitter configuration object (you can also set this later, but most commonly you'd do it on creation). I.e.:
const emitter = this.add.particles(100, 300, 'flares', {
frame: 'red',
angle: { min: -30, max: 30 },
speed: 150
});
This will create a 'red flare' emitter at 100 x 300.
Prior to 3.60 it would have looked like:
const manager = this.add.particles('flares');
const emitter = manager.createEmitter({
x: 100,
y: 300,
frame: 'r...
Phaser 3.60 Beta 17
Version 3.60.0 - Miku - in development
New Features - Nine Slice Game Object
Phaser 3.60 contains a new native Nine Slice Game Object. A Nine Slice Game Object allows you to display a texture-based object that can be stretched both horizontally and vertically, but that retains fixed-sized corners. The dimensions of the corners are set via the parameters to the class. When you resize a Nine Slice Game Object only the middle sections of the texture stretch. This is extremely useful for UI and button-like elements, where you need them to expand to accomodate the content without distorting the texture.
The texture you provide for this Game Object should be based on the following layout structure:
A B
+---+----------------------+---+
C | 1 | 2 | 3 |
+---+----------------------+---+
| | | |
| 4 | 5 | 6 |
| | | |
+---+----------------------+---+
D | 7 | 8 | 9 |
+---+----------------------+---+
When changing this objects width and / or height:
areas 1, 3, 7 and 9 (the corners) will remain unscaled
areas 2 and 8 will be stretched horizontally only
areas 4 and 6 will be stretched vertically only
area 5 will be stretched both horizontally and vertically
You can also create a 3 slice Game Object:
This works in a similar way, except you can only stretch it horizontally. Therefore, it requires less configuration:
A B
+---+----------------------+---+
| | | |
C | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| | | |
+---+----------------------+---+
When changing this objects width (you cannot change its height)
areas 1 and 3 will remain unscaled
area 2 will be stretched horizontally
The above configuration concept is adapted from the Pixi NineSlicePlane.
To specify a 3 slice object instead of a 9 slice you should only provide the leftWidth
and rightWidth
parameters. To create a 9 slice
you must supply all parameters.
The minimum width this Game Object can be is the total of leftWidth
+ rightWidth
. The minimum height this Game Object
can be is the total of topHeight
+ bottomHeight
. If you need to display this object at a smaller size, you can scale it.
In terms of performance, using a 3 slice Game Object is the equivalent of having 3 Sprites in a row. Using a 9 slice Game Object is the equivalent
of having 9 Sprites in a row. The vertices of this object are all batched together and can co-exist with other Sprites and graphics on the display
list, without incurring any additional overhead.
As of Phaser 3.60 this Game Object is WebGL only. Please see the new examples and documentation for how to use it.
New Features - Sprite FX
- When defining the
renderTargets
in a WebGL Pipeline config, you can now set optionalwidth
andheight
properties, which will create a Render Target of that exact size, ignoring thescale
value (if also given). WebGLPipeline.isSpriteFX
is a new boolean property that defines if the pipeline is a Sprite FX Pipeline, or not. The default isfalse
.GameObjects.Components.FX
is a new component that provides access to FX specific properties and methods. The Image and Sprite Game Objects have this component by default.fxPadding
and its related methodsetFXPadding
allow you to set extra padding to be added to the texture the Game Object renders with. This is especially useful for Sprite FX shaders that modify the sprite beyond its bounds, such as glow or shadow effects.- The
WebGLPipeline.setShader
method has a new optional parameterbuffer
that allows you to set the vertex buffer to be bound before the shader is activated. - The
WebGLPipeline.setVertexBuffer
method has a new optional parameterbuffer
that allows you to set the vertex buffer to be bound if you don't want to bind the default one. - The
WebGLRenderer.createTextureFromSource
method has a new optional boolean parameterforceClamp
that will for the clamp wrapping mode even if the texture is a power-of-two. RenderTarget
will now automatically set the wrapping mode to clamp.WebGLPipeline.flipProjectionMatrix
is a new method that allows you to flip the y and bottom projection matrix values via a parameter.PipelineManager.renderTargets
is a new property that holds an array ofRenderTarget
objects that allSpriteFX
pipelines can share, to keep texture memory as low as possible.PipelineManager.maxDimension
is a new property that holds the largest possible target dimension.PipelineManager.frameInc
is a new property that holds the amount theRenderTarget
s will increase in size in each iteration. The default value is 32, meaning it will create targets of size 32, 64, 96, etc. You can control this via the pipeline config object.PipelineManager.targetIndex
is a new property that holds the internal target array offset index. Treat it as read-only.- The Pipeline Manager will now create a bunch of
RenderTarget
objects during itsboot
method. These are sized incrementally from 32px and up (use theframeInc
value to alter this). These targets are shared by all Sprite FX Pipelines. PipelineManager.getRenderTarget
is a new method that will return the aRenderTarget
that best fits the dimensions given. This is typically called by Sprite FX Pipelines, rather than directly.PipelineManager.getSwapRenderTarget
is a new method that will return a 'swap'RenderTarget
that matches the size of the main target. This is called by Sprite FX pipelines and not typically called directly.PipelineManager.getAltSwapRenderTarget
is a new method that will return a 'alternative swap'RenderTarget
that matches the size of the main target. This is called by Sprite FX pipelines and not typically called directly.
New Features - Compressed Texture Support
Phaser 3.60 contains support for Compressed Textures. It can parse both KTX and PVR containers and within those has support for the following formats: ETC, ETC1, ATC, ASTC, BPTC, RGTC, PVRTC, S3TC and S3TCSRB. Compressed Textures differ from normal textures in that their structure is optimized for fast GPU data reads and lower memory consumption. Popular tools that can create compressed textures include PVRTexTool, ASTC Encoder and Texture Packer.
Compressed Textures are loaded using the new this.load.texture
method, which takes a texture configuration object that maps the formats to the files. The browser will then download the first file in the object that it knows it can support. You can also provide Texture Atlas JSON data, or Multi Atlas JSON data, too, so you can use compressed texture atlases. Currently, Texture Packer is the best tool for creating these type of files.
TextureSoure.compressionAlgorithm
is now populated with the compression format used by the texture.Types.Textures.CompressedTextureData
is the new compressed texture configuration object type.TextureManager.addCompressedTexture
is a new method that will add a compressed texture, and optionally atlas data into the Texture Manager and return aTexture
object than any Sprite can use.Textures.Parsers.KTXParser
is a new parser for the KTX compression container format.Textures.Parsers.PVRParser
is a new parser for the PVR compression container format.- The
WebGLRenderer.compression
property now holds a more in-depth object containing supported compression formats. - The
WebGLRenderer.createTextureFromSource
method now accepts theCompressedTextureData
data objects and creates WebGL textures from them. WebGLRenderer.getCompressedTextures
is a new method that will populate theWebGLRenderer.compression
object and return its value. This is called automatically when the renderer boots.WebGLRenderer.getCompressedTextureName
is a new method that will return a compressed texture format GLenum based on the given format.
New Features - Vastly Improved Mobile Performance and WebGL Pipeline Changes
WebGL Renderer Updates
Due to all of the changes with how WebGL texture batching works a lot of mostly internal methods and properties have been removed. This is the complete list:
- The
WebGLRenderer.currentActiveTexture
property has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.startActiveTexture
property has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.tempTextures
property has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.textureZero
property has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.normalTexture
property has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.textueFlush
property has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.isTextureClean
property has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.setBlankTexture
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.setTextureSource
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.isNewNormalMap
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.setTextureZero
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.clearTextureZero
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.setNormalMap
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.clearNormalMap
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.unbindTextures
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.resetTextures
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.setTexture2D
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.pushFramebuffer
method has had theresetTextures
argument removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.setFramebuffer
method has had theresetTextures
argument removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.popFramebuffer
method has had theresetTextures
argument removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.deleteTexture
method has had thereset
argument removed. - The
Textures.TextureSource.glIndex
property has been removed. - The
Textures.TextureSource.glIndexCounter
property has be...
Phaser 3.60 Beta 16
Version 3.60.0 - Miku - in development
New Features - Sprite FX
- When defining the
renderTargets
in a WebGL Pipeline config, you can now set optionalwidth
andheight
properties, which will create a Render Target of that exact size, ignoring thescale
value (if also given). WebGLPipeline.isSpriteFX
is a new boolean property that defines if the pipeline is a Sprite FX Pipeline, or not. The default isfalse
.GameObjects.Components.FX
is a new component that provides access to FX specific properties and methods. The Image and Sprite Game Objects have this component by default.fxPadding
and its related methodsetFXPadding
allow you to set extra padding to be added to the texture the Game Object renders with. This is especially useful for Sprite FX shaders that modify the sprite beyond its bounds, such as glow or shadow effects.- The
WebGLPipeline.setShader
method has a new optional parameterbuffer
that allows you to set the vertex buffer to be bound before the shader is activated. - The
WebGLPipeline.setVertexBuffer
method has a new optional parameterbuffer
that allows you to set the vertex buffer to be bound if you don't want to bind the default one. - The
WebGLRenderer.createTextureFromSource
method has a new optional boolean parameterforceClamp
that will for the clamp wrapping mode even if the texture is a power-of-two. RenderTarget
will now automatically set the wrapping mode to clamp.WebGLPipeline.flipProjectionMatrix
is a new method that allows you to flip the y and bottom projection matrix values via a parameter.PipelineManager.renderTargets
is a new property that holds an array ofRenderTarget
objects that allSpriteFX
pipelines can share, to keep texture memory as low as possible.PipelineManager.maxDimension
is a new property that holds the largest possible target dimension.PipelineManager.frameInc
is a new property that holds the amount theRenderTarget
s will increase in size in each iteration. The default value is 32, meaning it will create targets of size 32, 64, 96, etc. You can control this via the pipeline config object.PipelineManager.targetIndex
is a new property that holds the internal target array offset index. Treat it as read-only.- The Pipeline Manager will now create a bunch of
RenderTarget
objects during itsboot
method. These are sized incrementally from 32px and up (use theframeInc
value to alter this). These targets are shared by all Sprite FX Pipelines. PipelineManager.getRenderTarget
is a new method that will return the aRenderTarget
that best fits the dimensions given. This is typically called by Sprite FX Pipelines, rather than directly.PipelineManager.getSwapRenderTarget
is a new method that will return a 'swap'RenderTarget
that matches the size of the main target. This is called by Sprite FX pipelines and not typically called directly.PipelineManager.getAltSwapRenderTarget
is a new method that will return a 'alternative swap'RenderTarget
that matches the size of the main target. This is called by Sprite FX pipelines and not typically called directly.
New Features - Compressed Texture Support
Phaser 3.60 contains support for Compressed Textures. It can parse both KTX and PVR containers and within those has support for the following formats: ETC, ETC1, ATC, ASTC, BPTC, RGTC, PVRTC, S3TC and S3TCSRB. Compressed Textures differ from normal textures in that their structure is optimized for fast GPU data reads and lower memory consumption. Popular tools that can create compressed textures include PVRTexTool, ASTC Encoder and Texture Packer.
Compressed Textures are loaded using the new this.load.texture
method, which takes a texture configuration object that maps the formats to the files. The browser will then download the first file in the object that it knows it can support. You can also provide Texture Atlas JSON data, or Multi Atlas JSON data, too, so you can use compressed texture atlases. Currently, Texture Packer is the best tool for creating these type of files.
TextureSoure.compressionAlgorithm
is now populated with the compression format used by the texture.Types.Textures.CompressedTextureData
is the new compressed texture configuration object type.TextureManager.addCompressedTexture
is a new method that will add a compressed texture, and optionally atlas data into the Texture Manager and return aTexture
object than any Sprite can use.Textures.Parsers.KTXParser
is a new parser for the KTX compression container format.Textures.Parsers.PVRParser
is a new parser for the PVR compression container format.- The
WebGLRenderer.compression
property now holds a more in-depth object containing supported compression formats. - The
WebGLRenderer.createTextureFromSource
method now accepts theCompressedTextureData
data objects and creates WebGL textures from them. WebGLRenderer.getCompressedTextures
is a new method that will populate theWebGLRenderer.compression
object and return its value. This is called automatically when the renderer boots.WebGLRenderer.getCompressedTextureName
is a new method that will return a compressed texture format GLenum based on the given format.
New Features - Vastly Improved Mobile Performance and WebGL Pipeline Changes
WebGL Renderer Updates
Due to all of the changes with how WebGL texture batching works a lot of mostly internal methods and properties have been removed. This is the complete list:
- The
WebGLRenderer.currentActiveTexture
property has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.startActiveTexture
property has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.tempTextures
property has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.textureZero
property has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.normalTexture
property has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.textueFlush
property has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.isTextureClean
property has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.setBlankTexture
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.setTextureSource
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.isNewNormalMap
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.setTextureZero
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.clearTextureZero
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.setNormalMap
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.clearNormalMap
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.unbindTextures
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.resetTextures
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.setTexture2D
method has been removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.pushFramebuffer
method has had theresetTextures
argument removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.setFramebuffer
method has had theresetTextures
argument removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.popFramebuffer
method has had theresetTextures
argument removed. - The
WebGLRenderer.deleteTexture
method has had thereset
argument removed. - The
Textures.TextureSource.glIndex
property has been removed. - The
Textures.TextureSource.glIndexCounter
property has been removed.
Previously, WebGLRenderer.whiteTexture
and WebGLRenderer.blankTexture
had a data-type of WebGLTexture
but they were actually Phaser.Textures.Frame
instances. This has now been corrected and the two properties are now actually WebGLTexture
instances, not Frames. If your code relies on this mistake being present, please adapt it.
- The
RenderTarget
class will now create a Framebuffer that includes a Depth Stencil Buffer attachment by default. Previously, it didn't. By attaching a stencil buffer it allows things like Geometry Masks to work in combination with Post FX and other Pipelines. Fix #5802 (thanks @mijinc0) - When calling
PipelineManager.clear
andrebind
it will now check if the vao extension is available, and if so, it'll bind a null vertex array. This helps clean-up from 3rd party libs that don't do this directly, such as ThreeJS.
Mobile Pipeline
- The Mobile Pipeline is a new pipeline that extends the Multi Tint pipeline, but uses customized shaders and a single-bound texture specifically for mobile GPUs. This should restore mobile performance back to the levels it was around v3.22, before Multi Tint improved it all for desktop at the expense of mobile.
shaders/Mobile.vert
andshaders/Mobile.frag
are the two shaders used for the Mobile Pipeline.PipelineManager#MOBILE_PIPELINE
is a new constant-style reference to the Mobile Pipeline instance.autoMobilePipeline
is a new Game Configuration boolean that toggles if the Mobile Pipeline should be automatically deployed, or not. By default it is enabled, but you can set it tofalse
to force use of the Multi Tint pipeline (or if you need more advanced conditions to check when to enable it)defaultPipeline
is a new Game Configuration property that allows you to set the default Game Object Pipeline. This is set to Multi Tint as standard, but you can set it to your own pipeline from this value.PipelineManager.default
is a new propery that is used by most Game Objects to determine which pipeline they will init with.PipelineManager.setDefaultPipeline
is a new method that allows you to change the default Game Object pipeline. You could use this to allow for more fine-grained conditional control over when to use Multi or Mobile (or another pipeline)- The
PipelineManager.boot
method is now passed the default pipeline and auto mobile setting from the Game Config.
Multi Tint Pipeline
- The
batchLine
method in the Multi Pipeline will now check to see if the dxdy len is zero, and if so, it will abort drawing the line. This fixes issues on older Android devices, such as the Samsung Galaxy S6 or Kindle 7, where it would draw erroneous lines leading up to the top-left of the canvas under WebGL when rendering a stroked rounded rectangle. Fix #5429 (thanks @fkoch-tg...