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Revision as of 11:27, 24 April 2019
M.U.G.E.N, (c) Elecbyte 1999-2010
Documentation for version 1.1 (2010)
Updated 30 November 2010
Introduction
AIR is a text file format that describes a set of animations. The AIR format is used widely throughout M.U.G.E.N for animating characters, backgrounds, life bars and more.
An animation (specifically called an animation action in M.U.G.E.N) describes a single sequence of sprites to display. A character's animation file (.air) can contain as many animation actions as necessary.
The format
Here's a typical entry from an .air file. We will explain the format next.
; Standing Animation [Begin Action 000] Clsn2Default: 2 Clsn2[0] = -10, 0, 10,-79 Clsn2[1] = -4,-92, 6,-79 0,1, 0,0, 7 0,2, 0,0, 7 0,3, 0,0, 7 0,4, 0,0, 50 0,5, 0,0, 7 0,6, 0,0, 7 0,7, 0,0, 7 0,8, 0,0, 60
Semicolon (;) is used for comments. They can be used anywhere and everything after the semicolon on the same line is ignored.
[Begin Action n]
- This defines an action. The number n is called the action number. Each action must have a unique action number in order to be distinguishable from other actions. You can have many actions, but keep in mind that there are reserved actions numbers. These numbers and their associated actions are listed below.
Clsn2Default: 2
- This says that there are two collision boxes being defined and they will be defined for all the entries below the Clsn definition. In this case for every sprite in this action. If you don't want to have a default collision box, then change Clsn2Default to Clsn2. You must put the Clsn definition before a sprite entry. Each sprite entry can have its own collision boxes. Clsn2 refers to a plain collision box and Clsn1 refers to an "attacking" box. You use attacking boxes when making attacking actions such as punching and kicking or special moves. To define collision boxes, use AirEdit, a program included in the M.U.G.E.N development toolset.
0,3, 0,0, 7
An entry looking like this is called an "animation element", or just "element" for short. 1st number is the sprite's group number. 2nd number is the sprite's image number. You assign these numbers to your sprites when you make an .sff file.
So group #0 and image #3 were defined with sprmaker with an entry such as
0,3, mypic.png, 40, 40
.The 3rd and 4th numbers of the element represent the X and Y offsets to the sprite's position. For example, the pair
15,-10
would shift the sprite's position 15 pixels forwards and 10 pixels upwards. This offset is affected by scaling operations but not rotation.5th number is the length of time to display the element before moving onto the next, measured in game-ticks. There are 60 game-ticks in one second at normal game speed. For the 5th number, you can specify "-1" if you want that element to be displayed indefinitely (or until you switch to a different action). If you choose to do this, do it only on the last element of the action.
The "looptime" of an action is the sum of all the times of each element. Basically, it is the total length of the action in game-ticks. If the last element has a time of "-1", the looptime will be considered infinite. We call that "no loop". Actions with a finite loop time will go back to the first element after it has finished displaying the last element, and keep looping until the you switch to another action.
In the example action above, the looptime would be: 7 + 7 + 7 + 50 + 7 + 7 + 7 + 60 = 152 ticks
; Standing Animation [Begin Action 000] Clsn2Default: 2 Clsn2[0] = -10, 0, 10,-79 Clsn2[1] = -4,-92, 6,-79 0,1, 0,0, 7 0,2, 0,0, 7 Loopstart 0,3, 0,0, 7 0,4, 0,0, 50 0,5, 0,0, 7 0,6, 0,0, 7 0,7, 0,0, 7 0,8, 0,0, 60
Adding a line with the word Loopstart
will make the animation begin looping from the element on the following line. In the example above, when the element with sprite 0,8 is displayed, the next element to be shown will be the one with sprite 0,3.
When testing out your animations, you may find the pause and frame-advance functions useful. To pause, hit the "Pause" button. To advance the game by one game-tick, press Scroll Lock. Frame- advance only works when the game is paused.
Optional parameters
Here's an entry:
15,1, 0,0, 5
If you want to flip the sprite horizontally and/or vertically, you will need to use the "flip" parameters: V for vertical flip, and H for horizontal flip. These parameters will be 6th on the line. For example:
15,1, 0,0, 5, H ;<-- This flips it horizonally 15,2, 0,0, 5, V ;<-- This flips it vertically 15,3, 0,0, 5, VH ;<-- This flips it both ways, ie. rotates 180 deg
For certain things such as hit sparks, you might like to use color addition to draw the sprite, giving it a transparent effect. This is known as transparency blending. The parameters for color addition and subtraction are A
and S
respectively, and should go as the 7th on the line. For example:
15,4, 0,0, 5, ,A ;<-- Color addition (flip parameter omitted) 15,4, 0,0, 5, H, S ;<-- Flips horizontally and does color subtraction
If you wish to specify alpha values for color addition, use the parameter format AS???D???
, where ???
are replaced with values of the source and destination alpha respectively. Values range from 0 (low) to 256 (high). For example, AS64D192
stands for "Add Source_64 to Dest_192". Also, AS256D256
is equivalent to just A
. A shorthand for AS256D128
is A1
.
15,4, 0,0, 5, ,A1 ;<-- Color addition to 50% darkened dest 15,4, 0,0, 5, ,AS128D128 ;<-- Mix 50% source with 50% dest
To scale a sprite, use the 8th and 9th parameters for x-scale and y-scale respectively, e.g. this will scale the sprite by 1.5 and 2 respectively:
15,4, 0,0, 5, ,A, 1.5,2
To rotate a sprite about its axis, specify the angle in degrees in the 10th parameter:
15,4, 0,0, 5, ,A, 1,1, 45
Note: scale and angle parameters are not implemented in M.U.G.E.N versions prior to 1.1.
Interpolation
Certain parameters can be interpolated from one element to the next. Parameters supported by interpolation are the offset, blending, scale and angle.
Interpolation is supported in M.U.G.E.N 1.1 and higher.
Currently only linear interpolation is supported.
The syntax is:
Interpolate <type>
where <type>
is one of Offset
, Blend
, Scale
or Angle
.
Offset
- Interpolates the offset.
Blend
- Interpolates the transparency blend parameters. Both elements must have the same transparency function, i.e.
A
. To interpolate to or from a fully opaque element, useAS256D0
. Scale
- Interpolates the scale.
Angle
- Interpolates the angle.
One or more Interpolate
lines can be inserted between two elements to enable interpolation between them. Interpolate
lines before the first element will be used to interpolate from the last element to the first element in a looping animation.
The following example interpolates the offset between 0,0 and 100,0, and the scale between 1,1 and 1.5,1.5:
Interpolate Offset Interpolate Scale 20,0, 0,0, 60, , , 1,1 Interpolate Offset Interpolate Scale 20,0, 100,0, 60, , , 1.5,1.5
The following example animates a spinning object with a rotational period of 60 ticks:
20,0, 0,0, 59, , , 1,1, 0 Interpolate Angle 20,0, 0,0, 1, , , 1,1, 354
Character Reserved Action Numbers
M.U.G.E.N's common state engine (data/common1.cns) requires several animation actions to be present in your character (a warning will be logged if not all required animations are present). There are also some actions that are optional, which will be made use of if present in your character.
If you are unsure of how any of these actions should look, take a look at chars/kfm/kfm.air.
All action numbers in the 5000-5999 range not listed below are reserved for possible future use, so avoid using those numbers for custom actions.
An "opt" besides the number means the animation is optional.
Number | Description | Comments |
0 | Standing | |
5 | Stand turning | Must have finite looptime |
6 | Crouch turning | Must have finite looptime |
10 | Stand to crouch | Finite looptime |
11 | Crouching | |
12 | Crouch to stand | Finite looptime |
20 | Walking forwards | |
21 | Walking backwards | |
40 | Jump start (on ground) | Shown just before player leaves ground |
41 | Jump neutral (upwards) | Shown when player is going up |
42 | Jump forwards (upwards) | Shown when player is going up-towards |
43 | Jump back (upwards) | Shown when player is going up-back |
44 opt | Jump neutral (downwards) | Activated when Y-velocity > -2 |
45 opt | Jump fwd (downwards) | Same as above |
46 opt | Jump back (downwards) | Same as above |
47 | Jump landing | Shown as player lands on ground |
100 | Run fwd/hop forward | |
105 | Hop back | |
120 | Start guarding (stand) | Finite looptime |
121 | Start guarding (crouch) | Finite looptime |
122 | Start guarding (air) | Finite looptime |
130 | Guard (stand) | |
131 | Guard (crouch) | |
132 | Guard (air) | |
140 | Stop guarding (stand) | Finite looptime |
141 | Stop guarding (crouch) | Finite looptime |
142 | Stop guarding (air) | Finite looptime |
150 | Guarding a hit (stand) | Finite looptime |
151 | Guarding a hit (crouch) | Finite looptime |
152 | Guarding a hit (air) | No loop |
170 opt | Lose | (See Note 1) |
175 opt | Time Over drawgame | (See Note 1) |
180 opt | Win | No loop (181-189 for multiple) (See Note 1) |
190 opt | Intro | No loop (See Note 1) |
195 opt | Taunt | Finite looptime (See Note 1) |
5000 | Stand/Air Hit high (light) | Looptime around 10-20 |
5001 | Stand/Air Hit high (medium) | " (See Note 2) |
5002 | Stand/Air Hit high (hard) | " |
5005 | Stand Recover high (light) | No loop (See Note 3) |
5006 | Stand Recover high (medium) | " |
5007 | Stand Recover high (hard) | " |
5010 | Stand/Air Hit low (light) | Looptime around 10-20 |
5011 | Stand/Air Hit low (medium) | " |
5012 | Stand/Air Hit low (hard) | " |
5015 | Stand Recover low (light) | No loop |
5016 | Stand Recover low (medium) | " |
5017 | Stand Recover low (hard) | " |
5020 | Crouch Hit (light) | Looptime around 10-20 |
5021 | Crouch Hit (medium) | " |
5022 | Crouch Hit (hard) | " |
5025 | Crouch Recover (light) | No loop |
5026 | Crouch Recover (medium) | " |
5027 | Crouch Recover (hard) | " |
5030 | Stand/Air Hit back | Looptime around 10-20 |
5035 opt | Stand/Air Hit transition | Looptime around 5-15 (See Note 3) |
5040 | Air Recover | No loop |
5050 | Air Fall | No loop |
5060 opt | Air Fall (coming down) | No loop |
5070 | Tripped | |
5080 | LieDown Hit (stay down) | (See Note 4) |
5090 | LieDown Hit (hit up into air) | |
5100 | Hitting ground from fall | Looptime around 3 |
5160 | Bounce into air | |
5170 | Hit ground from bounce | Looptime around 3 or 4 |
5110 | LieDown | |
5120 | Get up from LieDown | |
5140 opt | LieDead (first rounds) | |
5150 opt | LieDead (final round) | |
5200 | Fall-recovery near ground | |
5210 | Fall-recovery in mid-air | |
5300 | Dizzy | |
5500 opt | "Continue?" screen | If omitted, plays dizzy anim |
5510 opt | "Yes" to "Continue" | If omitted, plays first win anim (not yet implemented) |
5520 opt | "No" to "Continue" | (not yet implemented) |
Optional Hit Up animations (see Note 5):
Number | Description | Comments |
5051 opt | Air fall -- hit up | |
5061 opt | Coming down from hit up | |
5081 opt | LieDown Hit (stay down) | |
5101 opt | Bounce from ground into air | Looptime around 3 |
5161 opt | Bounce into air | |
5171 opt | Hit ground from bounce | Looptime around 3 or 4 |
5111 opt | LieDown | |
5121 opt | Get up from LieDown | |
5151 opt | LieDead (first rounds) | |
5156 opt | LieDead (final round) |
Optional Hit Up-Diagonal animations (see Note 6):
Number | Description | Comments |
5052 opt | Air fall -- hit up | |
5062 opt | Coming down from hit up | |
5082 opt | LieDown Hit (stay down) | |
5102 opt | Bounce from ground into air | Looptime around 3 |
5162 opt | Bounce into air | |
5172 opt | Hit ground from bounce | Looptime around 3 or 4 |
5112 opt | LieDown | |
5122 opt | Get up from LieDown | |
5152 opt | LieDead (first rounds) | |
5157 opt | LieDead (final round) |
- Note 1
- These do not actually have to use only the stated numbers. If is
- more of a recommended number than a M.U.G.E.N one. If necessary, feel free to use any other action numbers.
Note 2: If medium and heavy hits are omitted, they default to the light hits
- Note 3
- "No loop" means last frame has a time of -1.
- For recover animation, the first frame of each recovery should be the last frame of the corresponding hit. Eg. If action 5000 has frame 5000,0 and 5000,1, then action 5005 should start with frame 5000,1. This is because the animation will be locked in the first frame of the recovery after the hit animation is over, but before the player has recovered from the hit. If you have a Stand/Air Hit transition animation, then the first frame of Air Recover and Air Fall should be the last frame of the transition animation.
- Note 4
- The Stand/Air Hit transition animation is played back after each
- hit animation in (or into) the air, but before the Air Recover and Air Fall animations.
- Note 5
- You can loop the LieDown Hit if you want the player to look like he
- is "twitching" while being hit
- Note 6
- This set of animations is optional. It is an alternate set of
- falling animations, which is used if hit by a HitDef with "Up" as the animtype.
- Note 7
- This set of animations is optional. It is an alternate set of
- falling animations, which is used if hit by a HitDef with "DiagUp" as the animtype.
Recommended Action Numbers
You do not have to follow this exactly, but it should serve as a guideline. In general, the states in the CNS should have the same numbers as the animation they use, to reduce confusion.
You might want space out your animation and state numbers. This gives room for you to add in more actions as necessary (some attacks can use multiple states and animations). For instance, Standing Light Kick and Standing Strong Kick could have action numbers 200 and 210 respectively.
Number | Description |
0-199 | reserved |
200-299 | Standing attacks |
300-399 | More standing attacks, running attacks |
400-499 | Crouch attacks |
500-599 | More crouch attacks |
600-699 | Air attacks |
700-799 | More air attacks |
800-999 | Unused - use if you need more states |
1000-2999 | All special attacks |
3000-4999 | All hyper attacks |
5000-5999 | reserved |