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Trinigy announces browser game engine

New rival to Unity; SDK is free to existing Vision Engine licensees

Software tools developer Trinigy has revealed the latest offshoot of its Vision engine - a 2D and 3D framework which supports PC-based browsers.

WebVision's SDK will be provided to all licensees of the cross-platform primary Vision engine, and is claimed to offer the likes of animated characters, rich graphics, believable AI and physics.

The engine joins the likes of Unity in the push to make browser-based 3D gaming commonplace.

"Games delivered through and played in browsers have really grown in popularity over the last few years," said Dag Frommhold, managing director at Trinigy.

"WebVision now extends our flexible Vision Engine to developers of browser-based games and allows them to capitalize on all of its advanced features in order to bring games with stunning visual quality and immersive gameplay to browsers."

More details are available on the official site, and a sample game created using WebVision is available here.

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Alec Meer: A 10-year veteran of scribbling about video games, Alec primarily writes for Rock, Paper, Shotgun, but given any opportunity he will escape his keyboard and mouse ghetto to write about any and all formats.
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