Over the last year I’ve independently curated half of the videos here. You just saved me 6 months of hunting at least I’m about to sit down with my notebook and the playlist order you’ve laid out here I can’t thank you enough.
Also, I’m certain someone has already recommended it, but I found the Celeste level design presentation at GDC (ua-cam.com/video/4RlpMhBKNr0/v-deo.htmlsi=8wYsPH2r32mYnLlH) an enlightening look at studio processes in development and there’s a video by the jet pack joyride guy (ua-cam.com/video/mxHkXADm3gU/v-deo.htmlsi=WjQYLNeWo9OM1eb6) that I also found provided clarity and motivation to get me into the other content. Idk, maybe bonus/Extra Credit material, I haven’t watched these in some time, but they stayed with me the way that Brackeys material did. I stepped away to do work irl and after 8 months I had retained most of what I learned there I felt. Which was nice and unexpected
How is it that a random video of a guy that I've never seen online that shows up and becomes the first video I pick on Godot Game development understands me more than I understand myself.
I recomend the brackeys godot video alot. Ive tried to get into game dev alot through the years. After that tutorials I actually experimented alot myself and learned more than ever. Alot of tutorials ends up just copying and not understanding the code. But after watching his, I could watch others that didnt explain as much why u do stuff, and still understand it myself
I second Brackeys godot video. I watched it 3 weeks ago, and have since actually started building my own game. I have actually implemented two mechanics not from the tutorial but I was able to figure them out due to what Brackeys taught me.
This is actually perfect advice. Because 50% of the videos you recommended ACTUALLY helped me make my first godot game for a game jam! Great video! ❤👍🏽
This is a great curated list. The thing that traps people in tutorial hell is the vast number of tutorials that just teach the same things. It gives people a feeling of fomo and thinking they need to watch just one more or they will miss the secret ingredient to make the special sauce.
I would personally suggest to add the every single node explained in Godoy by Lukky. It’s only like 50 minutes and lets you get a good understanding of everysingle node
I am so pumped about this playlist of videos. Thank you! I can’t believe I’ve watched random videos on godot like 100 times before finally coming across this.
I believe the first thing you said over how learning actually happen in a University course is great in order to people get the perspective on how much time it takes to learn something or a new set of skills that can help in creating a project from start to finish: around 5 years. That is just what it takes for an adult to be good and proficient on any field of knowledge or skill, be it a musical instrument, game design, programming, painting or finance or management. That considering you are studying the subject at least 4-5 hours a day 5 days a week. I've been following tutorials myself for around a year almost every day now and only now I am starting to feel confortable making very simple games (old arcade games like Pong, Space Invaders, BrickBreaker, and so on) by myself without aid...
I like this. I feel like watching all of these tutorials will build a necomer's (like myself) library so well that they'll at least know where to find the answers when they have questions.
Godot game lab has a tutorial on rougelike deck builder/slay the spire clone which is imo the most helpful intermediate/advanced tutorial It covers resources(the ones you make in godot and has .tres extenstion) and code architecture on a more advanced level
One tip I could throw out to reenforce what you said: get some pen and paper and make a simple learning roadmap. Then flush it out with tons of things you want to learn before going back through and separating realistic goals from long term advanced goals. Type it all up on a computer and then print it out like it's your school syllabus.
THANK YOU! I have either watched many of these videos or they are on my watch next playlist but your video suggestions made them in clean & narrative order while also adding missing pieces i haven't found or maybe even skipped over cuz of title&thumbnail not resonating with my needs. (Also ofc i also have watched a lot of tutorials that more or less waste time similar to the ones mentioned early on your video - and i might have some on that watch next list altho i have gotten bit better at avoiding them just by title & thumbnail & lenght & checking what kinda backlog the channel has). Your work will help me and i hope many others in their indie (godot) gamedev career/hobby ^^ Instasub and.... what.... only 40 subscribers and this is YOUR 1ST VIDEO!? Daaaang man, what a banger to start with! Wish you good luck and hope algorithm boosts visibility.
Outstanding. I've come across most of these tutorials, but amongst a sea of others without a clear idea of how to order or prioritize them. You've provided a super useful plan of attack. Thank you!
So, I have about 1 hr 30 mins more left in ClearCode's legend of godette's tutorial. The way I went through that tutorial was I commented every single line in that tutorial so that I can revisit it anytime.
Thank you so much for the playlist! But I think you should add one more, the one called "Godot for absolute beginners - start the right way" by Tutemic is really good
Damn bro decided to wake up and start COOKING. For real tho, great video. Singlehandedly reignited my desire to learn how to make games. Keep up the good work.
Did you even watch the video? The whole point is providing an alternative to that style of tutorial: Making a specific game by copying the person instead of actually learning anything. And I say this as someone who has finished those 12 hours.
@@haz6908 you do? I think I've watched couple of hours of it. I didn't really made a game alongside it, I just watched it. and I think he's discussing the concepts pretty nicely. Don't follow, understand.
"watch hours long tutorial video. come back next day. can't remember one thing. quit." Bruh, that's so relatable. you have no idea. probably to a lot of people.
ye funny thing i also made a similar video like this about some youtube channel making simple thing over and over and making it look like big for their profit, anyway making what you need is best thing to learn
sadly the first video isn't a tutorial. I've tried to follow along but he doesn't really shows or explains his process rather rushes thru it while talking over it as footage
So I know this might be a long shot, but does anyone know of a tutorial on how to make a game like Mario Party? Even if it’s just the separate pieces. I’ve been trying for what feels like 6 months to get the board section working with no luck. Any direction would be appreciated.
some heroes wear capes , some pink hoodies
lmao
@@VisualizeYourMusic What does it mean > Lmao? Full form of it?
@@BatCodeYt laughing my ass off
And masks with geometric forms
Lol
Finally a tutorial telling us how to get started with tutorials.
The new meta.
Over the last year I’ve independently curated half of the videos here. You just saved me 6 months of hunting at least I’m about to sit down with my notebook and the playlist order you’ve laid out here I can’t thank you enough.
AND YOUVE GOT THE PLAYLIST MADE WHAT A GOD!!!
Fastest sub of my LIFE
Also, I’m certain someone has already recommended it, but I found the Celeste level design presentation at GDC (ua-cam.com/video/4RlpMhBKNr0/v-deo.htmlsi=8wYsPH2r32mYnLlH) an enlightening look at studio processes in development and there’s a video by the jet pack joyride guy (ua-cam.com/video/mxHkXADm3gU/v-deo.htmlsi=WjQYLNeWo9OM1eb6) that I also found provided clarity and motivation to get me into the other content. Idk, maybe bonus/Extra Credit material, I haven’t watched these in some time, but they stayed with me the way that Brackeys material did. I stepped away to do work irl and after 8 months I had retained most of what I learned there I felt. Which was nice and unexpected
How is it that a random video of a guy that I've never seen online that shows up and becomes the first video I pick on Godot Game development understands me more than I understand myself.
I recomend the brackeys godot video alot. Ive tried to get into game dev alot through the years. After that tutorials I actually experimented alot myself and learned more than ever. Alot of tutorials ends up just copying and not understanding the code. But after watching his, I could watch others that didnt explain as much why u do stuff, and still understand it myself
I second Brackeys godot video. I watched it 3 weeks ago, and have since actually started building my own game. I have actually implemented two mechanics not from the tutorial but I was able to figure them out due to what Brackeys taught me.
This is actually perfect advice.
Because 50% of the videos you recommended ACTUALLY helped me make my first godot game for a game jam!
Great video! ❤👍🏽
This is a great curated list. The thing that traps people in tutorial hell is the vast number of tutorials that just teach the same things. It gives people a feeling of fomo and thinking they need to watch just one more or they will miss the secret ingredient to make the special sauce.
I would personally suggest to add the every single node explained in Godoy by Lukky. It’s only like 50 minutes and lets you get a good understanding of everysingle node
I am so pumped about this playlist of videos. Thank you! I can’t believe I’ve watched random videos on godot like 100 times before finally coming across this.
Thanks guy, I already watched the two Brackeys tutorials so I'll keep the others in mind.
I believe the first thing you said over how learning actually happen in a University course is great in order to people get the perspective on how much time it takes to learn something or a new set of skills that can help in creating a project from start to finish: around 5 years. That is just what it takes for an adult to be good and proficient on any field of knowledge or skill, be it a musical instrument, game design, programming, painting or finance or management. That considering you are studying the subject at least 4-5 hours a day 5 days a week.
I've been following tutorials myself for around a year almost every day now and only now I am starting to feel confortable making very simple games (old arcade games like Pong, Space Invaders, BrickBreaker, and so on) by myself without aid...
1 video, already top 10 list on my personal channels.
This is such a thoughtful video! Thank you so much for making this! I feel like I’ve been stuck for months and now I feel like I have a clear plan.
I like this. I feel like watching all of these tutorials will build a necomer's (like myself) library so well that they'll at least know where to find the answers when they have questions.
i was literally just scrolling through videos, skipping around to see what was good, then this popped up. very helpful !
Just started Godot last night, you make my day! Thank you very much!
Super handy to have all of these in one place! Thanks!
this is insanely useful, thank you
Nice dude! I've been there some time ago... Trying to learn gamedev by big tutos...
This is a really cool idea, tiny steps and stuf... Nice one!
As a newbie trying to get into godot, this is extremely helpful. Thank you so much for your service
Love this. I want video curation to become widespread. Great video
Godot game lab has a tutorial on rougelike deck builder/slay the spire clone which is imo the most helpful intermediate/advanced tutorial
It covers resources(the ones you make in godot and has .tres extenstion) and code architecture on a more advanced level
Appreciate this! I had already watched some of the ones you screenshotted at the beginning lol
Thanks for this compilation. I want to learn Godot, but didn't know where to start. ☺️
One tip I could throw out to reenforce what you said: get some pen and paper and make a simple learning roadmap. Then flush it out with tons of things you want to learn before going back through and separating realistic goals from long term advanced goals. Type it all up on a computer and then print it out like it's your school syllabus.
That's useful for literally ANYTHING. Great tips.
This is how I learned Mechanics, and now im one of the lead technicians at the local fordhouse.
THANK YOU! I have either watched many of these videos or they are on my watch next playlist but your video suggestions made them in clean & narrative order while also adding missing pieces i haven't found or maybe even skipped over cuz of title&thumbnail not resonating with my needs. (Also ofc i also have watched a lot of tutorials that more or less waste time similar to the ones mentioned early on your video - and i might have some on that watch next list altho i have gotten bit better at avoiding them just by title & thumbnail & lenght & checking what kinda backlog the channel has).
Your work will help me and i hope many others in their indie (godot) gamedev career/hobby ^^
Instasub and.... what.... only 40 subscribers and this is YOUR 1ST VIDEO!? Daaaang man, what a banger to start with!
Wish you good luck and hope algorithm boosts visibility.
22 seconds in, and you've got me hooked.Glad to be subscriber 670
Outstanding. I've come across most of these tutorials, but amongst a sea of others without a clear idea of how to order or prioritize them. You've provided a super useful plan of attack. Thank you!
You sir, are a saint for this.
Subscribed just to see more.
Thank you for this! IM GONNA GET STARTED WITH UR PLAYLIST!
Im working my way through the university! Thanks! I want to give a review once i am done.
A stellar video to start your channel.
So, I have about 1 hr 30 mins more left in ClearCode's legend of godette's tutorial. The way I went through that tutorial was I commented every single line in that tutorial so that I can revisit it anytime.
oh my god this is so smart..... im gonna go back and do that.
Just a fantastic video, and playlist. Thanks a ton.
Thank you so much for the playlist! But I think you should add one more, the one called "Godot for absolute beginners - start the right way" by Tutemic is really good
Excellent video and well said. When I eventually use Godot, I’ll remember to come back to this.
Wow i thought this channel had a lot more subs than it does, keep up the quality content
This video is an actual flare in the night sky (as in it’s very helpful, thank you)
Awesome! Thank you for filling in the gaps. So many gaps 😀
amazing video thank you so much for all the resources and narrowing my search
Great job! I have picked mostcof those out myself!
"This problem changes your perspective on game dev" by Jonas Tyroller is a must watch video about how to approach game design
welcome to youtube
This is the best you tube syllabus ever
Awesome Video!!!! 🎉
the fact you have 666 subscribers as Im watching this makes me feel like the devil himself is trying to convey this info... So it must be good advice!
Good video, would like if you made it separate for 2D games dev tutorials to watch and 3D games dev tutorials to watch.
Damn bro decided to wake up and start COOKING. For real tho, great video. Singlehandedly reignited my desire to learn how to make games. Keep up the good work.
Thanks for the playlist tutorial 🎉
Solid video . Great work
Under rated video, Get this man a cape.
when someone asks me what a mentor is, someone that guides you when you are lost, I will talk about the man in the pink hoodie.
Not adding
The ultimate guide of godot 4 is criminal
Maybe he's also intimidated by the 12h time to check it 😅
Did you even watch the video? The whole point is providing an alternative to that style of tutorial: Making a specific game by copying the person instead of actually learning anything. And I say this as someone who has finished those 12 hours.
@@haz6908 you do?
I think I've watched couple of hours of it.
I didn't really made a game alongside it, I just watched it.
and I think he's discussing the concepts pretty nicely.
Don't follow, understand.
You should make a playlist for all of these!
Trying to make my first game and don't know where to start. Thank you kind sir, for guiding me
Really good work Deeteeee 🌿👍
Holy moly your video is a life savior, thx bunch dude 🙏 😊
This is awesome bro, thank you 😎
Good job mate ☺️
Thanks bro for the awesome video. U got a subscriber. 🙂🙌
I think i will come back to this video in the future.
Saved video to watch later
Great info! Thanks for sharing!
Really helpful video, thanks man 🥂 🥂
"watch hours long tutorial video. come back next day. can't remember one thing. quit." Bruh, that's so relatable. you have no idea. probably to a lot of people.
Deeteeee: *refers to Lukky*
Me: "yep, this video is legit"
This video is fantastic!
Good video, could you do one video / Playlist specific for 2D games? Puzzle match 3 etc?
bro cooked
Lovely and good information ! ty
that's very good video dude
This is great!
ye funny thing i also made a similar video like this about some youtube channel making simple thing over and over and making it look like big for their profit, anyway making what you need is best thing to learn
Thanks for the mention ! 🤍
I'd like to hear if you have some suggestions for substitutes for the first & third person control videos for 2D games. Subscribed!
Id say design doc also works for the game theory part
awesome dude :)
awesomesauceballzorstyle
Terrific.
1 minute in, and is that the fucking comfy 😂
Can you do another video like this but covering Unreal Engine? Please!
JESUS MAN!! THIS IS THE Most PERFECT thing i was looking for!!! i can't thank you enought!!
Thank you.
Vídeo necessário! Obrigado! 👏🏼
Thanks man
i always find these comments annoying but now i’m making one i understand
who are you and why don’t you have more subscribers
good summary
Thanks brother
thank you
0:46 I need to know what was said that got that reaction from the dude on the right
Amazing job, thanks!
Can you also tell what music did you use in video?
Nice hoodie…
I'm commenting because pink hoodie guy said so
I feel you should have added more networking and multiplayer
Should I watch and practice all the videos in your playlist in order, from top to bottom?
Do u have recommendations for 2d games? thanks!🙏🏽
sadly the first video isn't a tutorial. I've tried to follow along but he doesn't really shows or explains his process rather rushes thru it while talking over it as footage
Good video
Nice compilation, however, is not that simple. You need to understand all the concepts so you can stick it all together. It's a nice start for sure.
So I know this might be a long shot, but does anyone know of a tutorial on how to make a game like Mario Party? Even if it’s just the separate pieces. I’ve been trying for what feels like 6 months to get the board section working with no luck. Any direction would be appreciated.