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Post news Report RSS Star Citizen Migrates From Crytek’s CryEngine To Amazon Lumberyard

Chris Roberts’ massive space sim is changing engines part-way through development.

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Hornet cockpit HUD mock up


Cloud Imperium Games, developer of the upcoming space sim Star Citizen, has announced that the game is switching engines. Until this point, Star Citizen was being developed on Crytek’s CryEngine, but in late December last year CIG announced via its website that it was switching to Amazon Lumberyard.

Of the switch, CIG CEO Chris Roberts stated:

“Lumberyard provides ground breaking technology features for online games, including deep back-end cloud integration on AWS and its social component with Twitch that enables us to easily and instantly connect to millions of global gamers. Because we share a common technical vision, it has been a very smooth and easy transition to Lumberyard. In fact, we are excited to announce that our just released 2.6 Alpha update for Star Citizen is running on Lumberyard and AWS.”


The timing of the announcement raised suspicion that the engine switch was related to Crytek’s reported financial troubles, along with Crytek’s own announcement a few days prior that they would be closing five studios and focusing its remaining resources on its development houses in Frankfurt, Germany, Kiev, and Ukraine.

However, a few days after the initial engine switch announcement, Roberts took to the Star Citizen forums to clarify that this was not the case. His statement included:

“We stopped taking new builds from Crytek towards the end of 2015. So did Amazon. Because of this the core of the engine that we use is the same one that Amazon use and the switch was painless (I think it took us a day or so of two engineers on the engine team) ... None of our work was thrown away or modified. We switched the like for like parts of the engine from CryEngine to Lumberyard. All of our bespoke work from 64 bit precision, new rendering and planet tech, Item / Entity 2.0, Local Physics Grids, Zone System, Object Containers and so on were unaffected and remain unique to Star Citizen.”

lumberyard


Roberts added that Amazon was investing in areas that made more sense for Star Citizen, such as the engine’s online and networking aspects, along with cloud computing – which were areas CIG did not believe Crytek has the resources to focus on or to compete with Amazon over.

Roberts continued:

“Finally there was no ulterior motive in the timing of the announcement. The deal wasn't fully finalized until after the release of 2.5 and we agreed with Amazon to announce the switch and partnership upon the release of 2.6, which would be the first release on Lumberyard and AWS. If you have been checking out our schedule updates you would know that we originally had hoped to release 2.6 at the beginning of December, not Friday the 23rd!”


Since Amazon Lumberyard is a CryEngine fork, and Star Citizen was originally being developed using that same fork of CryEngine, the switch doesn’t seem as dramatic as a typical engine shift could be mid-way through a project. And, with Amazon’s investments in Lumberyard’s online aspects, the ridiculously ambitious connected universe of Star Citizen could be one step closer to actually being made a reality.

lumberyard

Post comment Comments
Vuud
Vuud - - 881 comments

Crytek cannot into space

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GysreGod
GysreGod - - 11 comments

(buried)

Star Citizen is the biggest scam since scientology

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Vertelame
Vertelame - - 435 comments

And socialism, dont forget socialism

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Painmace
Painmace - - 341 comments

(buried)

I am glad I havent spent any money on this yet

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KoDan1
KoDan1 - - 186 comments

If something is too good to be real.
It is most likely not real.

I can't believe people fall for this.

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XanT
XanT - - 84 comments

Woah that's the hell of a change after so much development time - makes sense given the rocky scenario at Crytek at the moment.

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Guest
Guest - - 689,352 comments

Yeah changing ftom cryengine to cryengine+amazon clouds. Not quite a big change, and it is already fone.

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Darklord42
Darklord42 - - 252 comments

Seems like a logical move, and sounds like one they have been well prepared for if they already have a working test build. Not sure why they would sell it as a full blown engine switch out of the blue, unless they want to scare their many many financiers.

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SemVision
SemVision - - 504 comments

It's basically the same engine.

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Olku_
Olku_ - - 2,074 comments

lol rip star citizen

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vfn4i83
vfn4i83 - - 692 comments

Does this mean they are thinking in release the assets to the community ?

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Guest
Guest - - 689,352 comments

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Valianity
Valianity - - 148 comments

They changed it just because they can use the amazon cloud >_>

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clouddavis0296
clouddavis0296 - - 18 comments

this "move" is not even part way the alpha this is still real early in game cycle and they said that this was faster way for them to program items for the game and the code stay the same if any one wants there money back Chris said that send CIG a message and they would give anyone there money back in full

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rkraptor70
rkraptor70 - - 4,975 comments

Another nail in the Crytek coffin...

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ComradeWinston
ComradeWinston - - 1,822 comments

Slightly more lag and less pretty, as far as I can tell ingame. They better refine this engine.

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