Ooga booga, often referred to as a *game engine* for simplicity, is more so designed to be a new C Standard, i.e. a new way to develop software from scratch in C. Other than `<math.h>` we don't include a single C std header, but are instead writing a better standard library heavily optimized for developing games. Except for some image & audio file decoding, Ooga booga does not rely on any other third party code.
Ooga booga is designed to keep things simple, and let you solve video game problems the simplest way possible.
Performing SIMPLE and TRIVIAL tasks should be ... SIMPLE.
If you want to draw a rectangle, there should be a single procedure to draw a rectangle.
If you want to play an audio clip, there should be a single procedure to play an audio clip.
Etc.
This is something OS & Graphics API's tend to be fascinatingly terrible at even for the most trivial of tasks.
Thankfully, this is a main problem which oogabooga seeks to solve with a thin-as-possible layer of abstraction over the
If you need to do something more complicated, you should be able to focus on that problem alone.
We aim to give you tools at a low enough level where there are no constraints to how you can go about solving the problems which arise for your game.
If you wonder what any of the oogabooga procedures do, you can search for that symbol, go to the definition, and see & digest the exact implementation.
Almost all implementations are code written by us with this in mind (with the exception of 3 nothings stb headers).
### The "Build System"
Our build system is a build.c and a build.bat which invokes the clang compiler on build.c. That's it. And we highly discourage anyone from introducing unnecessary complexity like a third party build system (cmake, premake) or to use header files at all whatsoever.
This might sound like we are breaking some law, but we're not. We're using a compiler to compile a file which includes all the other files, it doesn't get simpler. We are NOT using third party software to run the same compiler to compile the same files over and over again and write it all to disk to then try and link it together. That's what we call silly business (and unreasonably slow compile times, without any real benefit).
Oogabooga is made to be used in Unity builds. The idea is that you only include oogabooga.c somewhere in your project, specify the entry (see build.c) and now it's a Oogabooga project. Oogabooga is meant to replace the C standard, so it is not tested with projects which include standard C headers, so that will probably cause issues.
## Course: From Scratch to Steam
This project was started to be used in a course detailing the full ride from starting out making a game to publishing it to Steam. If you're keen on going all-in on getting a small game published to steam within 2-3 months, then check it out for free in our [Skool Community](https://www.skool.com/game-dev).