Pragma
Pragma is a powerful backend game engine designed to support live-service games with a full suite of online infrastructure. It provides seamless cross-platform account management, allowing players to connect and interact across different gaming ecosystems. The engine enhances social experiences by enabling friend systems, guilds, and in-game events. For multiplayer functionality, Pragma efficiently handles party systems, matchmaking, and server allocation. It also includes robust player data management, covering inventories, progression systems, and battle passes, along with tools for configuring in-game content, stores, and meta-game features. With built-in support for live operations, monetization, telemetry, and extensive customization, Pragma empowers developers to create scalable and engaging online experiences.
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Hiro Game Development
Hiro is a client-server library built on the Nakama game server to rapidly and flexibly add economy, social, and LiveOps features to your game. It is available as a C# library for Unity Engine, a C++ library for Unreal Engine, and a server package that integrates with the game server. Hiro offers a comprehensive suite of battle-tested metagame features that are quick to implement, allowing developers to focus more on the core gameplay experience. Add base and loot table rewards for players to collect; integrate soft or real currency purchases; define stackable and consumable gameplay items; initialize and manage multiple currencies within the game economy. Adapt store bundles and offer walls based on player behavior; personalize various aspects of the player experience through experiments; schedule live events for players to participate in and earn exclusive rewards. Start and schedule timed or scored events with exclusive rewards; enable players to request and share inventory.
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OpenGL
OpenGL (Open Graphics Library) is a cross-language, cross-platform application programming interface for rendering 2D and 3D vector graphics. The API is typically used to interact with a graphics processing unit, to achieve hardware-accelerated rendering. Silicon Graphics, Inc. (SGI) began developing OpenGL in 1991 and released it on June 30, 1992. It is used for a variety of applications, including computer-aided design (CAD), video games, scientific visualization, virtual reality, and flight simulation. The OpenGL Registry contains specifications of the core API and shading language; specifications of Khronos- and vendor-approved OpenGL extensions; header files corresponding to the specifications; and related documentation including specifications, extensions, and headers for the GLX, WGL, and GLU APIs.
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Beamable
That's all that's needed to get the ability to build your own custom server logic via microservices along with a world of LiveOps tools and live services to build games in unity and unreal that players love. The first marketplace of live services solutions for games, plug-ins for monetization, generative AI, blockchain, and more. Built around a common data fabric that lets you snap together components that extend your game — without the headaches. Deliver state-of-the-art live services to all of your game teams. The entire Beamable live services stack can be deployed on-prem or in your own cloud environment, providing the ultimate in security, control, and flexibility. Starting building cloud-native live services for your game today. One line of code unlocks systems like persistent worlds, customized servers, social systems, and managed inventory — with no backend servers to configure or install.
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