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One thing I have noticed is a lack of good tutorials on the web for first-person game
programming in Flash 5, so here goes. Using this lesson, anyone with a basic understanding
of Flash should be able to build a realistic backdrop for a first-person space game. To avoid
making this a thirty page tutorial (it's going to be long enough already), I am leaving out
most game elements, such as weaponry and enemies, in order to concentrate on the
flight mechanics and starfields. It'll be up to you to add your own levels, enemies, etc., if
you feel like it.
Open a new Flash movie and name it "spaceFlight". Create the
following layers in this order from top to bottom: "planet", "player", "bigstars", "stars".
The first step is to create the symbols you'll need for the project. First, create a
set of crosshairs to be the player's focus. If you don't feel like designing your own
crosshairs, you can use the one in the enclosed *.fla file. After you're done designing the
target symbol, put an instance of that symbol on your "player" layer and name the instance
"player1".The next symbols you will need are the stars that will make up the space
environment of the game. I suggest for now making two star symbols, "star", and
"bigstar"( a larger version of "star" ). They don't have to be any more complicated
than white circles. For added realism and visual appeal, more sizes and types of stars can
be added later, once all the groundwork is laid. Finally, create a symbol instance to serve
as a nearby planet.
Place it on your "planet" layer and call it "planet1". If you do not want to draw the planet or stars,
you can find them in the enclosed *.fla file.