Unity Artificial Intelligence Programming - Fourth Edition
by Dr. Davide Aversa, Aung Sithu Kyaw, Clifford Peters
Flocking
In the early summer evenings, you have probably seen flocks of birds flying in the sky. You have probably noted how they seem to move as a single living object: they all move in a particular direction, turn around, and grow and shrink. In games, a flocking system aims to replicate this behavior: we want to implement an algorithm to move many objects as an organic group.
In games, we call each element of a flock a boid. To implement a flocking behavior, we do not need to tell each boid what to do; instead, all we need to do is implement a few rules for each boid to follow so that they can flock on their own. In fact, flocking is an excellent example of emergent behavior: each boid reacts exclusively to its neighbor's behaviors; nevertheless, ...
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