Deh0lise Posted May 25, 2014 Report Posted May 25, 2014 So... UE4 looks great but it has a monthly fee and I do not even know how to use UDK nor any previous unreal engine. Would it be a good idea to start with UDK and get used to it? do they share enough stuff so the transition is easy from one to the other? I haven't used UE4 nor UDK, so I'd appreciate an opinion of someone who did. Quote
Buddy Posted May 25, 2014 Report Posted May 25, 2014 You can pay once and then use it forever without updates. Just subscribe for one month TheOnlyDoubleF 1 Quote
Deh0lise Posted May 25, 2014 Author Report Posted May 25, 2014 You can pay once and then use it forever without updates. Just subscribe for one month Really??? So I can update(pay) whenever I want? that is a strange subscription model :S Anyway, learning UDK is similar to UE4? would it be worth it? Quote
MaK Posted May 25, 2014 Report Posted May 25, 2014 (edited) Buddy is right. Also I would suggest just jumping right into UE4, its changed a bunch from UDK so messing around in UDK wouldn't really benefit you that much (ex. no point in getting used to kismet when we have blueprints now). UE4 is pretty dang powerful, there's plenty of fantastic video tutorials, and honestly if you're familiar with making maps or modeling it shouldn't be that difficult to get into. If you do get the subscription now just hope that 4.2 comes out before your month is up. I initially went in with the plan of only paying one month but they just keep releasing so many updates I can't stop myself. Edited May 25, 2014 by MaK Quote
2d-chris Posted May 25, 2014 Report Posted May 25, 2014 well really it depends on what your doing, if your simply learning map construction, then both are fine. If you want to make an entire indy game, then U4 is the best idea. Quote
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