Castle Chase by Udaya Sathiyamoorthy
Besieged Bounty by Shawn Reardon and Joseph Nguyen
Project Vira by Rakshith Reddy, Andy Duverneau, Brian Akukwe, Evan Wu
Instructor: Funda Durupinar Babur
Office: M-03-0201-08
Office Hours: By appointment via Calendly The default setting is 15 min. You can make consecutive appointments if you think we'll need more time.
This course covers the game development pipeline, from modeling of virtual environments and gaming assets, to interactive rendering and real-time physics-based simulation in virtual environments. The syllabus is centered on the essential components of a game engine, as well as software engineering techniques relevant to game development. Students will learn the specifics of Unity game engine and use it to develop their own games for the assignments and the final project. The goal of this course is to prepare students for a career as a game developer.
Classes will be in-person. We will use Blackboard for the course. All the course material including slides, assignments, and announcements will be on Blackboard.
No textbook is required; course materials will be available on Blackboard. However, here are some useful resources:
Assignments: (50%)
There will be several programming and written assignments throughout the semester.
Final Project: (50%: Proposal: 5%, Progress Report: 5%, Final Game + Demo: 40%)
The students have two options for the final project:
Designing and implementing a game from scratch
or
Doing a research project on a games-related open research question. In this case, grading will be 10% research proposal, 10% progress report, 30% implementation + final paper + presentation
Students can work individually or in groups in either case.
Any unexcused work received past the due date will receive a deduction on the following scale:
Less than 1 day late: 10 points
More than 1 day late: 20 points * number of days.
So, an assignment with an original grade of 100 will receive 90 if it is submitted a few hours later than the deadline, 80 if it is submitted the next day (>24 hrs past deadline) until it receives no credit after the 5th day.
Any student submitting somebody else’s work as their own, or copying their own old work (whole or in part) to a new submission, will receive an F in the course. In particularly drastic cases, plagiarism can lead to expulsion from the University. The instructor will not tolerate dishonesty and will make no exceptions to this policy. Please protect yourself and the instructor from this unpleasant business by being honest and submitting only your own work.
Education at UMass Boston is sustained by academic integrity. Academic integrity requires that all members of the campus community are honest, trustworthy, responsible, respectful, and fair in academic work at the university. As part of being educated here, students learn, exercise, increase, and uphold academic integrity. Academic integrity is essential within all classrooms, in the many spaces where academic work is carried out by all members of the UMass Boston community, and in our local and global communities where the value of this education fulfills its role as a public good. Students are expected to adhere to the Student Code of Conduct, including policies about academic integrity, delineated in the University of Massachusetts Boston Graduate Studies Bulletin, Undergraduate Catalog, and relevant program student handbook(s), linked at www.umb.edu/academics/academic_integrity.
UMass Boston is committed to creating learning environments that are inclusive and accessible. If you have a personal circumstance that will impact your learning and performance in this class, please let me know as soon as possible, so we can discuss the best ways to meet your needs and the requirements of the course. If you have a documented disability or would like guidance about navigating support services, contact the Ross Center for Disability Services by email (ross.center@umb.edu), phone (617-287-7430), or in person (Campus Center, UL Room 211). To receive accommodations, students must be registered with the Ross Center and must request accommodations each semester that they are in attendance at UMass Boston. For more information visit: www.rosscenter.umb.edu. Please note that the Ross Center will provide a letter for your instructor with information about your accommodation only and not about your specific disability.
Course materials will be available on Blackboard.