Stop worrying about networking. Because we do.
Mirror is a high level Networking library for Unity, compatible with different low level Transports.
Mirror is for small indie games & large scale MMOs, made by the developers of uMMORPG and Cubica.
Mirror is optimized for ease of use & probability of success.
We needed a networking library that allows us to launch our games and survive the next decade.
The Server & Client are ONE project in order to achieve an order of magnitude gain in productivity.
Making multiplayer games this way is fun & easy. Instead of MonoBehaviour, Mirror provides NetworkBehaviour components with:
- [Server] / [Client] tags for server-only / client-only code
- [Command] for Client->Server function calls (e.g. UseItem)
- [ClientRpc] / [TargetRpc] for Server->Client function calls (e.g. AddChatMessage)
- [SyncVar] / SyncList to automatically synchronize variables from Server->Client
Note: Mirror is based on Unity's abandoned UNET Networking system. We fixed it up and pushed it to MMO Scale.
- (built in) KCP: reliable UDP
- (built in) Telepathy: TCP
- (built in) Ninja.Websockets: Websockets
- Libuv: TCP powered by Node.js' native C networking
- LiteNetLib UDP
- Ignorance: ENET UDP
- UNET LLAPI: UDP
- FizzySteam: SteamNetwork
- Epic: Epic Online Services
Get Unity 2018/2019 LTS, download Mirror on the Asset Store, open one of the examples & press Play!
Check out our Documentation to learn how it all works.
If you are migrating from UNET, then please check out our Migration Guide.
Mirror is free & open source software funded by Donations. If you love it, please consider supporting Mirror on GitHub. As reward, you'll receive our Network Profiler, priority support and more :)
- uMMORPG 480 CCU worst case test (everyone broadcasting to everyone else)
- Latest Results
Mirror is used in production by games ranging from small indie projects to large scale MMOs that will run for a decade or more.
10 years from now if your players encounter a networking bug and most of our contributors already moved on, someone will need to fix it. Therefore it is of utmost importance for us to follow the KISS principle in order for our games to survive.
Keeping the next decade in mind, contributing fixes / tests / improvements is highly appreciated while new features have a low probability of being merged.
At this point, what we don't add to Mirror is more important than what we do add to it!