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Physics

Excalibur comes built in with two physics simulations.

  • "Arcade" style physics which is good for basic collision detection for non-rotated rectangular areas.
    • Example: platformers, tile based games, top down, etc
  • "Realistic" style physics which is good for rigid body games where realistic collisions are desired
    • Example: block stacking, angry bird's style games, etc

Limitations

Note: The SolverStrategy.Arcade does not support body.friction.

Arcade

Arcade physics simulation is on by default, but can be enabled explicitly in the Engine constructor.

typescript
const game = new Engine({
physics: {
solver: SolverStrategy.Arcade
},
...
});
typescript
const game = new Engine({
physics: {
solver: SolverStrategy.Arcade
},
...
});

Realistic

Realistic physics are not on by default, but can be enabled explicitly in the Engine constructor.

typescript
const game = new Engine({
physics: {
solver: SolverStrategy.Realistic
},
...
});
typescript
const game = new Engine({
physics: {
solver: SolverStrategy.Realistic
},
...
});

Example

Other Physics Settings

See PhysicsConfig documentation for more

Using Physics with Actors or Entities

The physics simulation has 2 major pieces for actors

  1. BodyComponent - Controls the motion and qualities of the physics simulation
  2. ColliderComponent - Stores the geometry of any collider and performs overlap testing

Actors

Actors come out of the box with both of these components, an implicitly created BodyComponent and a ColliderComponent of a box that matches the specified width and height, or a circle

typescript
const actor = new ex.Actor({
pos: ex.vec(200, 200),
width: 100,
height: 100,
collisionType: ex.CollisionType.Active,
})
const builtInBox = actor.collider.get()
typescript
const actor = new ex.Actor({
pos: ex.vec(200, 200),
width: 100,
height: 100,
collisionType: ex.CollisionType.Active,
})
const builtInBox = actor.collider.get()

Entities

Reminder entities don't have anything pre-built, all Actors are Entities, but with the common built in features included.

typescript
const entity = new ex.Entity([
new TransformComponent(),
new BodyComponent(),
new ColliderComponent(),
])
const tx = entity.get(TransformComponent)
const body = entity.get(BodyComponent)
const collider = entity.get(ColliderComponent)
typescript
const entity = new ex.Entity([
new TransformComponent(),
new BodyComponent(),
new ColliderComponent(),
])
const tx = entity.get(TransformComponent)
const body = entity.get(BodyComponent)
const collider = entity.get(ColliderComponent)

Collision System Under the Hood

Under the hood excalibur does a broadphase/narrowphase approach to locating and resolving collisions.

  1. Broadphase is run against a dynamic tree spatial data structure to locate potential collision pairs

  2. Narrowphase is run to find any actual overlapping colliders

  3. The collision solver is run (Arcade or Realistic). Collisions are resolved according to the configured solver, either Arcade which does axis aligned resolution, or realistic which attempts to do a force based resolution.

    a. precollision events are fired on Entities just before collision resolution, you have an opportunity to call CollisionContact.cancel and stop the collision at this time.

    b. postcollisionevents are fire after resolution.

    c. collisionstart events fire when two colliders first touch, and does not fire in subsequent frames until they separate.

    d. collisionend events fire when two colliders separate, and does not fire in subsequent frames until they touch again.

Example Active-Active/Active-Fixed scenario

ts
// setup game
const game = new ex.Engine({
width: 600,
height: 400,
physics: {
// use rigid body realistic
solver: ex.SolverStrategy.Realistic,
// set global acceleration simulating gravity pointing down
gravity: ex.vec(0, 700)
}
});
const block = new ex.Actor({
pos: new ex.Vector(300, 0),
width: 20,
height: 20,
color: ex.Color.Blue
});
block.body.useBoxCollider(); // useBoxCollision is the default, technically optional
block.body.collider.type = ex.CollisionType.Active;
game.add(block);
const circle = new ex.Actor({
x: 301,
y: 100,
width: 20,
height: 20,
color: ex.Color.Red
});
circle.body.useCircleCollider(10);
circle.body.collider.type = ex.CollisionType.Active;
game.add(circle);
const ground = new ex.Actor({
x: 300,
y: 380,
width: 600,
height: 10,
color: ex.Color.Black;
});
ground.body.useBoxCollider(); // optional
ground.body.collider.type = ex.CollisionType.Fixed;
game.add(ground);
// start the game
game.start();
ts
// setup game
const game = new ex.Engine({
width: 600,
height: 400,
physics: {
// use rigid body realistic
solver: ex.SolverStrategy.Realistic,
// set global acceleration simulating gravity pointing down
gravity: ex.vec(0, 700)
}
});
const block = new ex.Actor({
pos: new ex.Vector(300, 0),
width: 20,
height: 20,
color: ex.Color.Blue
});
block.body.useBoxCollider(); // useBoxCollision is the default, technically optional
block.body.collider.type = ex.CollisionType.Active;
game.add(block);
const circle = new ex.Actor({
x: 301,
y: 100,
width: 20,
height: 20,
color: ex.Color.Red
});
circle.body.useCircleCollider(10);
circle.body.collider.type = ex.CollisionType.Active;
game.add(circle);
const ground = new ex.Actor({
x: 300,
y: 380,
width: 600,
height: 10,
color: ex.Color.Black;
});
ground.body.useBoxCollider(); // optional
ground.body.collider.type = ex.CollisionType.Fixed;
game.add(ground);
// start the game
game.start();