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Ability

Abilities are CoreObjects that can be added to Players and guide the Player's animation in sync with the Ability's state machine. Spawn an Ability with World.SpawnAsset() or add an Ability as a child of an Equipment/Weapon to have it be assigned to the Player automatically when that item is equipped.

Abilities can be activated by association with an Action Binding. Their internal state machine flows through the phases: Ready, Cast, Execute, Recovery, and Cooldown. An Ability begins in the Ready state and transitions to Cast when its Binding (for example Left mouse click) is activated by the owning player. It then automatically flows from Cast to Execute, then Recovery and finally Cooldown. At each of these state transitions it fires a corresponding event.

Only one ability can be active at a time. By default, activating an ability will interrupt the currently active ability. The canBePrevented and preventsOtherAbilities properties can be used to customize interruption rules for competing abilities.

If an ability is interrupted during the Cast phase, it will immediately reset to the Ready state. If an ability is interrupted during the Execute or Recovery phase, the ability will immediately transition to the Cooldown phase.

Properties

Property Name Return Type Description Tags
isEnabled boolean Turns an Ability on/off. It stays on the Player but is interrupted if isEnabled is set to false during an active Ability. True by default. Read-Write
canActivateWhileDead boolean Indicates if the Ability can be used while the owning Player is dead. False by default. Read-Only
name string The name of the Ability. Read-Only
actionBinding string This property is deprecated. Please use actionName instead, but note that actionBinding and actionName use different values. Which action binding will cause the Ability to activate. Possible values of the bindings are listed on the Ability binding page. Read-Only, Deprecated
actionName string Which binding set action name will cause the Ability to activate. See Binding Sets reference. Read-Only
owner Player Assigning an owner applies the Ability to that Player. Read-Write
castPhaseSettings AbilityPhaseSettings Config data for the Cast phase (see below). Read-Only
executePhaseSettings AbilityPhaseSettings Config data for the Execute phase. Read-Only
recoveryPhaseSettings AbilityPhaseSettings Config data for the Recovery phase. Read-Only
cooldownPhaseSettings AbilityPhaseSettings Config data for the Cooldown phase. Read-Only
animation string Name of the animation the Player will play when the Ability is activated. Possible values: See Ability Animation for strings and other info. Read-Only
canBePrevented boolean Used in conjunction with the phase property preventsOtherAbilities so multiple abilities on the same Player can block each other during specific phases. True by default. Read-Only

Functions

Function Name Return Type Description Tags
Activate() None Activates an Ability as if the button had been pressed. None
Interrupt() None Changes an Ability from Cast phase to Ready phase. If the Ability is in either Execute or Recovery phases it instead goes to Cooldown phase. None
AdvancePhase() None Advances a currently active Ability from its current phase to the next phase. For example, an ability in the Cast phase will begin the Execute phase, an ability on cooldown will become ready, etc. None
GetCurrentPhase() AbilityPhase The current AbilityPhase for this Ability. These are returned as one of: AbilityPhase.READY, AbilityPhase.CAST, AbilityPhase.EXECUTE, AbilityPhase.RECOVERY and AbilityPhase.COOLDOWN. None
GetCurrentPhaseSettings() AbilityPhaseSettings Returns the settings for the current phase of this Ability. Returns nil if the current phase is AbilityPhase.READY. None
GetPhaseTimeRemaining() number Seconds left in the current phase. None
GetTargetData() AbilityTarget Returns information about what the Player has targeted this phase. None
SetTargetData(AbilityTarget) None Updates information about what the Player has targeted this phase. This can affect the execution of the Ability. None

Events

Event Name Return Type Description Tags
readyEvent Event<Ability> Fired when the Ability becomes ready. In this phase it is possible to activate it again. None
castEvent Event<Ability> Fired when the Ability enters the Cast phase. None
executeEvent Event<Ability> Fired when the Ability enters Execute phase. None
recoveryEvent Event<Ability> Fired when the Ability enters Recovery. None
cooldownEvent Event<Ability> Fired when the Ability enters Cooldown. None
interruptedEvent Event<Ability> Fired when the Ability is interrupted. None
tickEvent Event<Ability ability, number deltaTime> Fired every tick while the Ability is active (isEnabled = true and phase is not ready). None

Examples

Example using:

castEvent

The Cast phase begins as soon as an ability is activated. By checking if the player casting the ability isGrounded we can create an effect that propels you upwards, but it doesn't work if you are already jumping or flying. We detect this is the castEvent, which is early enough for an Interrupt() to reset the ability.

--Server script
local ability = script.parent

function OnCast(ability)
    if ability.owner.isGrounded then
        ability.owner:SetVelocity(Vector3.UP * 2000)
    else
        ability:Interrupt()
    end
end

ability.castEvent:Connect(OnCast)

See also: CoreObject.parent | Ability.owner | Player.isGrounded | Vector3.UP | Event.Connect


Example using:

cooldownEvent

In this example, a fighting game has an "invincible" mechanic where player attacks are not interrupted while they have this effect. Some powerful attacks make the player invincible during the entire active cycle of the ability. The effect is gained at the beginning of the cast phase and is removed at the end of the recovery phase, before the cooldown begins. The resource system is used in keeping track of the invincibility effect.

--Server script
local ability = script.parent

function OnCast(ability)
    ability.owner:AddResource("invincible", 1)
end

function OnCooldown(ability)
    ability.owner:RemoveResource("invincible", 1)
end

ability.castEvent:Connect(OnCast)
ability.cooldownEvent:Connect(OnCooldown)

See also: CoreObject.parent | Player.owner | Ability.castEvent | Event.Connect


Example using:

executeEvent

Weapons implement lots of built-in gameplay that doesn't require any scripting, such as attack and reload abilities. However, they can be augmented with additional mechanics. In this example, a special sound effect is played when a weapon shoots while low on ammunition. The script expects to be a child of a weapon's "Shoot" ability.

--Server script
local ability = script.parent
local weapon = script:FindAncestorByType('Weapon')
local lowAmmoSound = script:GetCustomProperty("LowAmmoSound")

local LOW_AMMO_PERCENTAGE = 0.2

function OnExecute(ability)
    if weapon.currentAmmo / weapon.maxAmmo <= LOW_AMMO_PERCENTAGE then
        World.SpawnAsset(lowAmmoSound, {position = weapon:GetWorldPosition()})
    end
end

ability.executeEvent:Connect(OnExecute)

See also: CoreObject.parent | Weapon.currentAmmo | World.SpawnAsset | Ability.executeEvent | Event.Connect


Example using:

interruptedEvent

The interruptedEvent fires when an ability is going through it's activation process and Interrupt() is called on it, or if it becomes disabled. In this example, interruption is a key part of the game design, so a visual effect is spawned at the player's position to help communicate the interaction between players.

--Server script
local ability = script.parent
local interruptedVfx = script:GetCustomProperty("InterruptedVfx")

function OnInterrupted(ability)
    if Object.IsValid(ability.owner) then
        World.SpawnAsset(interruptedVfx, {position = ability.owner:GetWorldPosition()})
    end
end

ability.interruptedEvent:Connect(OnInterrupted)

See also: CoreObject.parent | Object.IsValid | Ability.owner | World.SpawnAsset | Player.GetWorldPosition | Event.Connect


Example using:

readyEvent

The Ready phase begins when an ability comes off cooldown and is "ready" to be used again. In this example, we create an invisibility effect that takes advantage of the readyEvent, leveraging the cooldown duration of the ability as a clock to determine when to make the player visible again.

-- Server script
local ability = script.parent

function OnExecute(ability)
    -- Hide the player
    ability.owner:SetVisibility(false)
end

function OnReady(ability)
    -- Show the player
    ability.owner:SetVisibility(true)
end

ability.readyEvent:Connect(OnReady)
ability.executeEvent:Connect(OnExecute)

See also: CoreObject.parent | Ability.owner | Player.SetVisibility | Event.Connect


Example using:

recoveryEvent

The recoveryEvent marks the end of an ability's Execute phase and the beginning of its Recovery phase. In this example, a melee punch ability has a trigger that causes damage to enemies who overlap it. For it to work the trigger is only enabled for a brief moment, during the Execute phase.

--Server script
local ability = script.parent
local trigger = script:GetCustomProperty("ImpactTrigger"):WaitForObject()
trigger.collision = Collision.FORCE_OFF

local DAMAGE_AMOUNT = 10

function OnExecute(ability)
    trigger.collision = Collision.FORCE_ON
end

function OnRecovery(ability)
    trigger.collision = Collision.FORCE_OFF
end

ability.executeEvent:Connect(OnExecute)
ability.recoveryEvent:Connect(OnRecovery)

function OnBeginOverlap(trigger, other)
    -- Only damage enemy players
    if other:IsA("Player") and other.team ~= ability.owner.team then
        other:ApplyDamage(Damage.New(DAMAGE_AMOUNT))
    end
end

trigger.beginOverlapEvent:Connect(OnBeginOverlap)

See also: CoreObject.parent | CoreObjectReference.WaitForObject | Ability.executeEvent | Event.Connect | other.IsA | Player.team | Damage.New | Trigger.beginOverlapEvent


Example using:

tickEvent

Abilities fire the tickEvent while they are active or on cooldown (not on Ready state). In this example, a piece of equipment carries several abilities, but we want to do a common update logic on all of them. Note: Ability.tickEvent works somewhat differently from a Tick() function - tickEvent is an actual event that just happens to fire once per tick. Each invocation of the callback runs on its own task. This means that, unlike Tick(), there is no guarantee that it will wait for the previous tickEvent to finish before starting the next one. This means you can't use things like Task.Wait() to add time between ticks.

local equipment = script.parent
local allAbilities = equipment:GetAbilities()

function OnTick(ability, deltaTime)
    print("Updating ability " .. ability.name)
end

for _, ability in ipairs(allAbilities) do
    ability.tickEvent:Connect(OnTick)
end

See also: CoreObject.parent | Equipment.GetAbilities | Event.Connect | CoreLua.print


Example using:

Activate

The Ability Activate() function behaves as if the player had pressed the key binding. In order for a server gameplay decision to result in an ability activation, it must be communicated over the network somehow. In this example, a trigger overlap is representative of an arbitrary gameplay decision on the server. A broadcast message is sent to the client, who receives the event and activates the ability.

--Server script
local trigger = script.parent
local function OnBeginOverlap(trigger, other)
    if other:IsA("Player") then
        Events.BroadcastToPlayer(other, "SteppedOnObject")
    end
end

trigger.beginOverlapEvent(OnBeginOverlap)

--[[#description
    Client context script under the ability:
]]
local ability = script:FindAncestorByType("Ability")

function OnPlayAnimation()
    if ability.owner and ability.owner == Game.GetLocalPlayer() then
        ability:Activate()
    end
end

Events.Connect("SteppedOnObject", OnPlayAnimation)

See also: CoreObject.parent | Trigger.beginOverlapEvent | other.IsA | Events.BroadcastToPlayer | Ability.owner | Game.GetLocalPlayer()


Example using:

AdvancePhase

GetCurrentPhase

In this example an ability is on cooldown, but can be set back to Ready by calling AdvancePhase().

function EndAbilityCooldown(ability)
    if ability:GetCurrentPhase() == AbilityPhase.COOLDOWN then
        ability:AdvancePhase()
    end
end

Example using:

GetCurrentPhase

GetPhaseTimeRemaining

In this example, while the ability is on cooldown, the percentage completion of the cooldown is calculated. This could be useful, for instance, in displaying user interface.

local ability = script:FindAncestorByType("Ability")

function Tick()
    if ability:GetCurrentPhase() == AbilityPhase.COOLDOWN then
        local duration = ability.cooldownPhaseSettings.duration
        local remaining = ability:GetPhaseTimeRemaining()
        local percent = 100 * (1 - remaining / duration)

        print("Cooldown remaining: %" .. string.format("%.2f",percent))
    end
end

See also: CoreObject.FindAncestorByType | Ability.GetCurrentPhase | AbilityPhaseSettings.duration | CoreLua.print


Example using:

GetTargetData

SetTargetData

The ability's targeting data gives a lot of information about where and what the player is aiming at. If setup correctly, it can also be modified programmatically. In this example, the Z position of the target is flattened horizontally. Useful, for example, in a top-down shooter. For this to work it should be placed in a client context under the ability. The ability should also have the option "Is Target Data Update" turned off for the Execute phase, otherwise any data set programmatically will be overwritten when the phase changes.

--Server script
local ability = script:FindAncestorByType("Ability")

function OnCast(ability)
    local abilityTarget = ability:GetTargetData()
    local pos = abilityTarget:GetHitPosition()

    pos.z = ability.owner:GetWorldPosition().z + 50

    abilityTarget:SetHitPosition(pos)
    ability:SetTargetData(abilityTarget)
end

ability.castEvent:Connect(OnCast)

See also: CoreObject.FindAncestorByType | AbilityTarget.GetHitPosition | Ability.owner | Player.GetWorldPosition | Event.Connect


Example using:

Interrupt

Interrupting an ability either sends it back into ready state (if it was still in the Cast phase) or puts it on cooldown. In this example, we have an ability that searches for all enemies in a 10 meter radius and interrupts their abilities.

--Server script
local ability = script.parent
local RADIUS = 1000 -- 10 meters

function OnExecute(ability)
    local center = ability.owner:GetWorldPosition()
    -- Search for enemies
    local enemies = Game.FindPlayersInCylinder(center, RADIUS, {ignoreTeams = ability.owner.team})
    for _, enemy in ipairs(enemies) do
        -- Interrupt all their abilities
        local enemyAbilities = enemy:GetAbilities()
        for _,a in ipairs(enemyAbilities) do
            a:Interrupt()
        end
    end
end

ability.executeEvent:Connect(OnExecute)

See also: CoreObject.parent | Ability.owner | Player.GetWorldPosition | Game.FindPlayersInCylinder | Event.Connect


Example using:

actionName

Even though some API properties are read-only, they are useful is solutions such as user interface. In this example, a client context script searches the local player's list of abilities to find one that matches the action name (input) designated for this UI component. When it's found, the ability's name is written to the UI Text object.

--Client script
local ACTION_NAME = script:GetCustomProperty("ActionName")
local NAME_UI = script:GetCustomProperty("NameUIText"):WaitForObject()

function GetLocalPlayerAbilityWithActionName()
    local player = Game.GetLocalPlayer()
    local abilities = player:GetAbilities()

    for _, ability in pairs(abilities) do
        if ability.actionName == ACTION_NAME then
            return ability
        end
    end

    return nil
end

function Tick()
    local ability = GetLocalPlayerAbilityWithActionName()
    if ability then
        NAME_UI.text = ability.name
    end
end

See also: CoreObject.name | CoreObjectReference.WaitForObject | Game.GetLocalPlayer | Player.GetAbilities | UIText.text


Example using:

animation

In this example, the ProcessAbilities() function can be called once, such as at the beginning of a round, to take inventory of a player's abilities and classify them based on animation. This example also demonstrates how to disconnect event listeners so that we don't listen for the same event multiple times.

--Server script
function OnMelee1HandCast(ability)
    print("One-handed melee attack")
end

function OnMelee2HandCast(ability)
    print("Two-handed melee attack")
end

local abilityEventListeners = {}

function CleanupListeners(player)
    -- If we have previously processed this player, cleanup all listeners
    if abilityEventListeners[player] then
        for i, eventListener in ipairs(abilityEventListeners[player]) do
            eventListener:Disconnect()
        end
        abilityEventListeners[player] = nil
    end
end

function ProcessAbilities(player)
    CleanupListeners(player)

    local allAbilities = player:GetAbilities()

    for _, ability in ipairs(allAbilities) do
        if string.match(ability.animation, "melee") then
            local eventListener
            if string.match(ability.animation, "1h") then
                eventListener = ability.castEvent:Connect(OnMelee1HandCast)
            else
                eventListener = ability.castEvent:Connect(OnMelee2HandCast)
            end
            table.insert(abilityEventListeners[player], eventListener)
        end
    end
end

-- Lets also cleanup when a player leaves the game, as perhaps their ability objects might stay in the game.
Game.playerLeftEvent:Connect(CleanupListeners)

See also: EventListener.Disconnect | Player.GetAbilities | Ability.castEvent | Event.Connect | Game.playerLeftEvent | CoreLua.print


Example using:

canActivateWhileDead

Some games may have abilities that can be used while the player is dead. In this example, we have abilities that can only be activated while dead. If not dead, then it's interrupted.

--Server script
local ability = script:FindAncestorByType("Ability")

function OnCast(ability)
    if ability.canActivateWhileDead and not ability.owner.isDead then
        ability:Interrupt()
    end
end

ability.castEvent:Connect(OnCast)

--[[#description
    On the client context, a user interface component that displays ability details is hidden until the player dies:
]]
local abilityCanvas = script:GetCustomProperty("Canvas")
local ACTION_NAME = script:GetCustomProperty("ActionName")

function Tick(deltaTime)
    local ability = GetLocalPlayerAbilityWithActionName()

    if ability
    and ability.isEnabled
    and ability.canActivateWhileDead
    and ability.owner
    and ability.owner.isDead then

        abilityCanvas.visibility = Visibility.INHERIT
    else
        abilityCanvas.visibility = Visibility.FORCE_OFF
    end
end

-- Searches the local player's abilities until one with a matching action name is found
-- The ACTION_NAME search criteria should be set in the custom property
function GetLocalPlayerAbilityWithActionName()
    local abilities = Game.GetLocalPlayer():GetAbilities()
    for _, ability in pairs(abilities) do
        if ability.actionName == ACTION_NAME then
            return ability
        end
    end

    return nil
end

See also: CoreObject.FindAncestorByType | Ability.owner | Player.isDead | Event.Connect | CoreLua.Tick


Example using:

canBePrevented

In this example, an ability recognizes that it has been interrupted by the activation of another, special ability, that is setup to serve for animation cancelling. The canBePrevented property is usually true in this game, but in this special case it has been configured as false so that it can be activated at any time. The player gains vertical impulse as result of the synergy and hears a small audio cue that helps communicate the mechanic.

--Server script
local ability = script.parent
local cancelSound = script:GetCustomProperty("CancelSound")

function OnInterrupted(ability)
    local player = ability.owner
    if not Object.IsValid(player) then return end

    for _, a in ipairs(player:GetAbilities()) do
        if a:GetCurrentPhase() ~= AbilityPhase.READY and not a.canBePrevented then
            player:AddImpulse(Vector3.UP * 1000)
            World.SpawnAsset(cancelSound, {position = player:GetWorldPosition()})
            return
        end
    end
end

ability.interruptedEvent:Connect(OnInterrupted)

See also: CoreObject.parent | Ability.owner | Object.IsValid | Player.GetAbilities | Vector3.UP | World.SpawnAsset | Event.Connect


Example using:

castPhaseSettings

executePhaseSettings

recoveryPhaseSettings

cooldownPhaseSettings

In this example, a function in a client context script can be called to show the elapsed times for an ability. The UI Text it controls displays how many seconds are remaining in the current phase, and the color of the text blends from black to white to indicate the percentage of completion. Although the Execute and Recovery phases are actually separate, they are here presented to the player as a single phase.

--Client script
local COUNTDOWN_TEXT = script:GetCustomProperty("CountdownText"):WaitForObject()

function UpdateForAbility(ability)
    local currentPhase = ability:GetCurrentPhase()

    local percent = 1
    local cooldownText = "Ready"

    if currentPhase ~= AbilityPhase.READY then
        local phaseDuration
        local timeRemaining = ability:GetPhaseTimeRemaining()

        if currentPhase == AbilityPhase.CAST then
            phaseDuration = ability.castPhaseSettings.duration
        elseif currentPhase == AbilityPhase.EXECUTE then
            -- In the case of Execute and Recovery phases, we can show those as a single one
            local recoveryD = ability.recoveryPhaseSettings.duration
            phaseDuration = ability.executePhaseSettings.duration + recoveryD
            timeRemaining = timeRemaining + recoveryD
        elseif currentPhase == AbilityPhase.RECOVERY then
            phaseDuration = ability.recoveryPhaseSettings.duration
        else --currentPhase == AbilityPhase.COOLDOWN
            phaseDuration = ability.cooldownPhaseSettings.duration
        end

        if phaseDuration > 0 then
            percent = 1 - timeRemaining / phaseDuration
        end
        cooldownText = string.format("%.1f", timeRemaining)
    end

    COUNTDOWN_TEXT.text = cooldownText

    local c = Color.Lerp(Color.BLACK, Color.WHITE, percent)
    COUNTDOWN_TEXT:SetColor(c)
end

See also: CoreObject.GetCustomProperty | CoreObjectReference.WaitForObject | Ability.GetCurrentPhase | AbilityPhaseSettings.duration | UIText.text | Color.Lerp


Example using:

isEnabled

In this example, an equipment is setup with multiple abilities that all use the same action binding. This script cycles through the abilities, making sure only one is enabled at a time. The owner property is cleared for the previous ability and set for the next one, as part of ensuring the correct one activates when the binding is pressed.

--Server script
local equipment = script:FindAncestorByType("Equipment")
local abilities = {}
local abilityIndex = 1

function OnAbilityRecovery(ability)
    if (#abilities > 1) then
        abilities[abilityIndex].isEnabled = false
        abilities[abilityIndex].owner = nil

        abilityIndex = abilityIndex + 1
        if (abilityIndex > #abilities) then
            abilityIndex = 1
        end

        abilities[abilityIndex].isEnabled = true
        abilities[abilityIndex].owner = equipment.owner
    end
end

for _, child in pairs(equipment:FindDescendantsByType("Ability")) do
    table.insert(abilities, child)

    child.isEnabled = (#abilities == 1)

    child.recoveryEvent:Connect(OnAbilityRecovery)
end

See also: CoreObject.FindAncestorByType | Ability.owner | Equipment.owner | Event.Connect


Example using:

owner

Usually, abilities are presented as part of an equipment, but that isn't a requirement. In this example, when new players join the game they are assigned an ability through the use of the owner property.

--Server script
local abilityTemplate = script:GetCustomProperty("AbilityTemplate")

function OnPlayerJoined(player)
    local ability = World.SpawnAsset(abilityTemplate)
    ability.owner = player
end

Game.playerJoinedEvent:Connect(OnPlayerJoined)

See also: CoreObject.GetCustomProperty | World.SpawnAsset | Player.owner | Game.playerJoinedEvent | Event.Connect


Tutorials

Abilities in Core


Dernière mise à jour: 30 juin 2022