The story take place in the future. Tired of the civilisation, you decided to retire to a distant world. You bought a new discovered planet in your local planet selling agency.
The dealer made a good price on a paradisiac planet with beautiful landscape with islands, sandy beaches, palm forest and a beautiful blue sky. The catalog showed a friendly world populated of peaceful animals.
You take your new ship and go through the long journey. During the trip, you dreamed of your new world. And finally, after a year of boring travel you reached the orbit and started the landing procedure.
Unfortunately, you hit an asteroid that was not on the map and your ship was heavily damaged. The ship wasn't controllable anymore and finally you crashed on your planet.
By chance, you're still alive, but most of your equipment and materials were destroyed.
As soon as you looked around you, your realized that the planet wasn't what the dealer promised you.
What a strange and desolated world with a black sky and strange luminous blocks !!!
Everything you see is uncommon and you know nothing about it...
As you look on your personal digital assistant, you noticed you received an important email that arrived using powerful long distance intergalactic emitters: the agency said that they may have made a mistake because someone confused planet data files. They said that in the eventuality you remain alive, the sales contract did not mention the details of the surface of the planet, and unfortunately, they can't make any exchange and refund.
But before you can do something, you have no choice: you have no intergalactic ship to escape and no suitable communication equipment to query some help.
What you will do now is up to you...
Blackvoxel is a new sandbox game based on a voxel engine.
Development started in Aug. 2010 as a hobby research project because we wanted to play with voxel based paradigms. With time, the bunch of code slowly became a true game project.
The game is written in the C++ programming language using OpenGL and running on Linux, Windows, and Mac OS X operating systems.
The game is released under the GNU GPL V3 free license or (at your option) any later version.
(c) 2010-2014 Laurent Thiebaut and Olivia Merle.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
(See below for 3rd party libraries copyright and license).
Blackvoxel includes in the source tree its own modified version of the Squirrel langage by Alberto Demichelis.
Here is the copyright and license for the Squirrel project.
Copyright (c) 2003-2012 Alberto Demichelis
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
Here are informations for compiling and running Blackvoxel from source.
For version <= 2.*: Don't forget to report any difficulty and errors in the forum in the troubleshooting section.
If you've made a port of Blackvoxel or compiled it for an unlisted (or not yet supported) platform, we would be happy to get feedback to improve this tutorial. Warning with which version you are using: this fork is implementing some tools that the original repo doesn't.
Compiling and running blackvoxel with most Linux distributions is very simple.
See below for per-distro step-by-step instructions.
If you want to go further, modify and debug, we recommend using Eclipse CDT.
- Download source tarball (.tar.bz2 source archive) here and put it in your home directory
- Open a terminal type: "term" in Ubuntu lancher or press 'ctrl-alt-t'
- Enter the following commands:
sudo apt-get install build-essential libglew-dev libsdl1.2-dev
tar -xjvf blackvoxel_source*
cd blackvoxel_source*
make
Once build succeeded, you can launch Blackvoxel with the following command:
cd ~/blackvoxel_source* && ./blackvoxel
- Download source tarball (.tar.bz2 source archive) here and put it in your home directory
- Open a terminal:
- Open the activity menu
- Type "terminal" on the "type to search" field at the right of the screen.
- Click on the "terminal" (not the "root terminal") icon.
- Enter the following commands :
sudo apt-get install build-essential libglew-dev libsdl1.2-devexit
tar -xjvf blackvoxel_source*
cd blackvoxel_source*
make
Once build succeeded, you can launch Blackvoxel with the following command:
cd ~/blackvoxel_source* && ./blackvoxel
sudo zypper in gcc-c++ glew-devel libSDL-devel
tar -xf blackvoxel_source*
make
./blackvoxel
sudo apt-get install gcc-c++ libglew-devel libSDL-devel
tar -xf blackvoxel_source*
make
./blackvoxel
sudo pacman -S base-devel glew1.10 sdl
tar xf blackvoxel_source*
make
./blackvoxel
Blackvoxel can be compiled in other distros in the same ways described above.
For non Debian distributions, you'll have to find the exact way using the following instructions:
- Install the gcc with g++ compiler, linker, tools and headers.
- Find and Install equivalent packages for required libraries with the package manager in your Linux Distribution.
We hope to add distributions to this list with time.
No attempt to compile Blackvoxel on other unixes has been done at this time. In theory, it should work with minimal adaptations.
Anyway, you need to have hardware 3D OpenGL support to run Blackvoxel.
- Open a terminal type: "term" in ubuntu lancher or press 'ctrl-alt-t'
- Enter the following commands:
git clone https://github.com/rajdakin/Blackvoxel.git
cd Blackvoxel
sudo apt-get install build-essential libglew-dev libsdl1.2-dev cmake
cmake .
- Wait until it's done
- Type
make all
Once build succeded, you can launch Blackvoxel with the following command:
cd ~/Blackvoxel && ./blackvoxel
- Open a terminal:
- Open the activity menu
- Type "terminal" on the "type to search" field at the right of the screen.
- Click on the "terminal" (not the "root terminal") icon.
- Enter the following commands:
git clone https://github.com/rajdakin/Blackvoxel.git
cd Blackvoxel
sudo apt-get install build-essential libglew-dev libsdl1.2-dev cmake
cmake .
- Wait until it's done
- Type
make all
Once build succeded, you can launch Blackvoxel with the following command:
cd ~/Blackvoxel && ./blackvoxel
It might be the same as the other distributions:
- Open a terminal whichever way
- Enter the following commands:
git clone https://github.com/rajdakin/Blackvoxel.git
cd Blackvoxel
sudo apt-get install build-essential libglew-dev libsdl1.2-dev cmake
cmake .
- Wait until it's done
- Type
make all
Once build succeded, you can launch Blackvoxel with the following command:
cd ~/Blackvoxel && ./blackvoxel
No attempt to compile Blackvoxel on other unixes has been done at this time. In theory, it should work with minimal adaptations.
Anyway, you need to have hardware 3D OpenGL support to run Blackvoxel.
Version 3.*: You must use CMake to compile BlackVoxel. Unfortunately, I don't know how to do with Windows.
Version <= 2.*: Unfortunately, building Blackvoxel in Windows isn't as simple as in Linux due to lacking an equivalent software package management system.
So, it will be harder than in Linux if you aren't really accustomed with programming.
Here is what you need to get for compiling Blackvoxel in Window
- The mingw gcc compiler suite.
- Download and compile the following libraries : freeglut, glew, libsdl.
- Eclipse CDT developpment IDE (Optionnal).
We have tested successfully the tools listed here for the Windows version.
Compilation with other development tools is untested.
Version 3.*: Unfortunately, I don't know how to do with Mac OS X.
Version 2.*: Blackvoxel on OS X is experimental at the moment, so please report any difficulties in the forum or issue tracker
- Execute
xcode-select --install
if you don't have Xcode's command line tools. - For the GLEW and SDL dependencies, make sure Homebrew is installed.
brew install glew sdl
- Download the Blackvoxel source tarball (or zip file) here and extract it to somewhere in your home directory
- Use something like
cd blackvoxel_source*
to open your terminal to the root of your Blackvoxel source folder. make
./blackvoxel
No attempt to compile Blackvoxel on other unixes has been done at this time. In theory, it should work with minimal adaptations.
Anyway, you need to have hardware 3D OpenGL 1 support to run Blackvoxel.