Jumping and squashing monsters
First, we have to change a few settings related to physics interactions. Enter the world of physics layers.
Physics bodies have access to two complementary properties: layers and masks. Layers define on which physics layer(s) an object is.
Masks control the layers that a body will listen to and detect. This affects collision detection. When you want two bodies to interact, you need at least one to have a mask corresponding to the other.
If that’s confusing, don’t worry, we’ll see three examples in a second.
The important point is that you can use layers and masks to filter physics interactions, control performance, and remove the need for extra conditions in your code.
By default, all physics bodies and areas are set to both layer and mask . This means they all collide with each other.
Physics layers are represented by numbers, but we can give them names to keep track of what’s what.
Let’s give our physics layers a name. Go to Project -> Project Settings.
In the left menu, navigate down to Layer Names -> 3D Physics. You can see a list of layers with a field next to each of them on the right. You can set their names there. Name the first three layers player, enemies, and world, respectively.
Now, we can assign them to our physics nodes.
In the Main scene, select the Ground node. In the Inspector, expand the Collision section. There, you can see the node’s layers and masks as a grid of buttons.
The ground is part of the world, so we want it to be part of the third layer. Click the lit button to toggle off the first Layer and toggle on the third one. Then, toggle off the Mask by clicking on it.
As I mentioned above, the Mask property allows a node to listen to interaction with other physics objects, but we don’t need it to have collisions. The Ground doesn’t need to listen to anything; it’s just there to prevent creatures from falling.
Note that you can click the “…” button on the right side of the properties to see a list of named checkboxes.
Next up are the Player and the Mob. Open Player.tscn
by double-clicking the file in the FileSystem dock.
Select the Player node and set its Collision -> Mask to both “enemies” and “world”. You can leave the default Layer property as the first layer is the “player” one.
Then, open the Mob scene by double-clicking on Mob.tscn
and select the Mob node.
Set its Collision -> Layer to “enemies” and unset its Collision -> Mask, leaving the mask empty.
These settings mean the monsters will move through one another. If you want the monsters to collide with and slide against each other, turn on the “enemies” mask.
Note
The mobs don’t need to mask the “world” layer because they only move on the XZ plane. We don’t apply any gravity to them by design.
The jumping mechanic itself requires only two lines of code. Open the Player script. We need a value to control the jump’s strength and update _physics_process()
to code the jump.
After the line that defines fall_acceleration
, at the top of the script, add the jump_impulse
.
GDScript C#
// Don't forget to rebuild the project so the editor knows about the new export variable.
// ...
// Vertical impulse applied to the character upon jumping in meters per second.
[Export]
public int JumpImpulse = 20;
Inside _physics_process()
, add the following code before the line where we called move_and_slide()
.
GDScript C#
func _physics_process(delta):
#...
# Jumping.
if is_on_floor() and Input.is_action_just_pressed("jump"):
velocity.y += jump_impulse
#...
That’s all you need to jump!
The is_on_floor()
method is a tool from the KinematicBody
class. It returns true
if the body collided with the floor in this frame. That’s why we apply gravity to the Player: so we collide with the floor instead of floating over it like the monsters.
If the character is on the floor and the player presses “jump”, we instantly give them a lot of vertical speed. In games, you really want controls to be responsive and giving instant speed boosts like these, while unrealistic, feel great.
Notice that the Y axis is positive upwards. That’s unlike 2D, where the Y axis is positive downward.
Let’s add the squash mechanic next. We’re going to make the character bounce over monsters and kill them at the same time.
We need to detect collisions with a monster and to differentiate them from collisions with the floor. To do so, we can use Godot’s group tagging feature.
Open the scene Mob.tscn
again and select the Mob node. Go to the Node dock on the right to see a list of signals. The Node dock has two tabs: Signals, which you’ve already used, and Groups, which allows you to assign tags to nodes.
Click on it to reveal a field where you can write a tag name. Enter “mob” in the field and click the Add button.
An icon appears in the Scene dock to indicate the node is part of at least one group.
We can now use the group from the code to distinguish collisions with monsters from collisions with the floor.
Head back to the Player script to code the squash and bounce.
At the top of the script, we need another property, bounce_impulse
. When squashing an enemy, we don’t necessarily want the character to go as high up as when jumping.
GDScript C#
# meters per second.
export var bounce_impulse = 16
// Don't forget to rebuild the project so the editor knows about the new export variable.
// Vertical impulse applied to the character upon bouncing over a mob in meters per second.
[Export]
public int BounceImpulse = 16;
Then, at the bottom of _physics_process()
, add the following loop. With move_and_slide()
, Godot makes the body move sometimes multiple times in a row to smooth out the character’s motion. So we have to loop over all collisions that may have happened.
In every iteration of the loop, we check if we landed on a mob. If so, we kill it and bounce.
With this code, if no collisions occurred on a given frame, the loop won’t run.
GDScript C#
public override void _PhysicsProcess(float delta)
{
// ...
for (int index = 0; index < GetSlideCount(); index++)
{
// We check every collision that occurred this frame.
KinematicCollision collision = GetSlideCollision(index);
// If we collide with a monster...
{
// ...we check that we are hitting it from above.
if (Vector3.Up.Dot(collision.Normal) > 0.1f)
{
// If so, we squash it and bounce.
mob.Squash();
_velocity.y = BounceImpulse;
}
}
}
That’s a lot of new functions. Here’s some more information about them.
The functions get_slide_count()
and get_slide_collision()
both come from the KinematicBody class and are related to move_and_slide()
.
get_slide_collision()
returns a object that holds information about where and how the collision occurred. For example, we use its collider
property to check if we collided with a “mob” by calling is_in_group()
on it: collision.collider.is_in_group("mob")
.
Note
The method is_in_group()
is available on every Node.
To check that we are landing on the monster, we use the vector dot product: Vector3.UP.dot(collision.normal) > 0.1
. The collision normal is a 3D vector that is perpendicular to the plane where the collision occurred. The dot product allows us to compare it to the up direction.
With dot products, when the result is greater than 0
, the two vectors are at an angle of fewer than 90 degrees. A value higher than 0.1
tells us that we are roughly above the monster.
We are calling one undefined function, mob.squash()
. We have to add it to the Mob class.
Open the script Mob.gd
by double-clicking on it in the FileSystem dock. At the top of the script, we want to define a new signal named squashed
. And at the bottom, you can add the squash function, where we emit the signal and destroy the mob.
GDScript C#
# Emitted when the player jumped on the mob.
signal squashed
# ...
func squash():
queue_free()
We will use the signal to add points to the score in the next lesson.
With that, you should be able to kill monsters by jumping on them. You can press F5 to try the game and set as your project’s main scene.
However, the player won’t die yet. We’ll work on that in the next part.