Building and exporting a Narrat game
Building your game as a website
You can build your game as a static website
npm run build
TIP
This will generate a built version of your game as a website in the dist/
folder
Building your game as an app
The narrat template game is setup to use electron and electron-forge to easily build a desktop application out of your game.
Requirements
- Have git installed
- If you're installing git on windows, using the default options for every step in the setup process is fine
You can run your game as an app:
npm run electron
Building the game
Or you can package it as an executable (should work on Windows, Mac, Linux):
npm run package
TIP
This will create an application for your OS in the out/
folder, which you can distribute by zipping it as a folder if desired.
Please look at the electron documentation if you want to customise how your app is built, window sizes and other things (hint: Most of it takes place in the electron-something.js
files at the root of the repo)
Releasing on itch.io
A common platform to release narrat games on is itch.io, as it's a friendly platform for small indie games.
You can either release your game as a web game, or as an executable.
Web game release on itch.io
Itch.io expects you to upload a zip file containing a web application, that is to say a folder containing at least a index.html
file that has been zipped up.
When you run the npm run build
command, it will generate a dist
folder containing a web version of your game. You can zip this dist
folder and upload it to itch.io. as a web game, and your game should work on itch.io
Desktop Application release on itch.io
To release your game as a normal desktop application on itch.io, follow the instructions for exporting your game for the OS you want to release on, and then upload that to itch.io following the normal procedure.
Generating a setup or similar package for distributing the game
Electron is able to create release packages of the game for most common platforms. Included in the default setup of narrat are the configs to release for Windows, Mac and Linux.
Creating a distributable (a "setup file")
To create a distributable, you need to run the following command:
npm run make
TIP
This will create a distributable for your OS in a make
subfolder of the out
folder.
This command uses electron-forge
's make command to generate a distributable like a setup for Windows, or a DMG for Mac.
It uses config defined in the config
part of the package.json
file, which lists the makers available and their config. There you can edit some values, or add new makers.
The options configured by default should help if you want to publish a simple game, but if you have more specific needs like publishing to app stores or in a specific format, see the sections below for more info on the available options.
In some cases, you might need to add a new dependency to your package to use a new maker. For example you might need to run npm install --save-dev @electron-forge/maker-pkg
to use the .pkg maker to release on the MacOS App Store.
Windows Distribution
The default (and recommended by Electron) way to create a Windows distributable is to use Squirrel.Windows, which is already configured for you in narrat games and should happen if you run npm run make
on Windows. You can see its config in the package.json
file.
There is also the option to create a more old school .msi installer with the WiX MSI maker which you can configure in your package.json if desired.
Finally, the AppX maker can create Windows Store releases.
MacOS Distribution
Running npm run package
on a Mac should create a file that can be executed on MacOS, but if you want to distribute your app as a dmg or pkg, or on the App Store, then you should add your own config for the DMG maker or pkg maker. This should allow creation of a DMG or PKG file that can be distributed either directly or on the App Store..
Linux Distribution
There are all sorts of ways to distribute Linux applications depending on distributions and their package managers. The list of makers in the electron-forge list a few of the options, including .deb and .snap