4.9 KiB
4.9 KiB
name, description
| name | description |
|---|---|
| game-ui-frontend | Design UI surfaces for browser games. Use when the user asks for HUDs, menus, overlays, responsive layouts, or visual direction that must protect the playfield. |
Game UI Frontend
Overview
Use this skill whenever the game needs a visible interface layer. The job is not to produce generic dashboard UI. The job is to produce a readable, thematic browser-game interface that supports the play experience.
Default assumption: build the game world in canvas or WebGL, and build text-heavy UI in DOM.
Frontend Standards
- Establish visual direction before coding.
- Genre and fantasy
- Material language
- Typography
- Palette
- Motion tone
- Use CSS variables for the UI theme.
- Build clear hierarchy.
- Critical combat or survival information first
- Secondary tools second
- Rarely used settings behind menus or drawers
- Protect the playfield first, especially in 3D.
- The initial screen should feel playable within a few seconds.
- Default to one primary persistent HUD cluster and at most one small secondary cluster.
- Keep the center of the playfield clear during normal play.
- Keep the lower-middle playfield mostly clear during normal play.
- Put lore, field notes, quest details, and long control lists behind drawers, toggles, or pause surfaces.
- Prefer contextual prompts and transient hints over permanent boxed panels.
- Keep overlays readable over motion.
- Use backing panels, edge treatment, contrast, and restrained blur where needed.
- Design for both desktop and mobile from the start.
- Design 3D UI around camera and input control boundaries.
- Pause or gate camera-control input when menus, dialogs, or pointer-driven UI are active.
- Keep pointer-lock, drag-to-look, and menu interaction states explicit.
3D Starter Defaults
For exploration, traversal, or third-person starter scaffolds, prefer this UI budget:
- one compact objective chip or status strip at the edge
- one transient controls hint or interaction prompt
- one optional collapsible secondary surface such as a journal, map, or quest log
Do not open every informational surface on first load. The scene should be readable before the user opens any deeper UI.
As a default implementation constraint for 3D browser games:
- no always-on full-width header plus multi-card body plus full-width footer layout
- no large center-screen or lower-middle overlays during normal movement
- no more than roughly 20-25% of the viewport covered by persistent HUD on desktop unless the user explicitly requests a denser layout
- on mobile, collapse to a narrow stack or contextual chips before covering the playfield with larger panels
Prompting Rules
When asking the model to design or implement game UI, include:
- the game fantasy
- the camera or viewpoint
- the player verbs
- the HUD layers
- the camera or control mode when the game is 3D
- the tone of motion
- desktop and mobile expectations
- playfield protection and disclosure strategy
- explicit anti-patterns to avoid
Use ../../references/frontend-prompts.md for concrete prompt shapes.
Motion Rules
- Prefer a few meaningful transitions over constant micro-animation.
- Reserve strong motion for state change, reward, danger, and onboarding.
- Respect reduced-motion settings for non-essential animation.
- Keep 3D HUD motion from competing with camera motion.
What Good Looks Like
- HUD elements are legible without flattening the scene.
- Menus feel native to the game world, not like a SaaS admin panel.
- Layout adapts cleanly across breakpoints.
- Pointer, keyboard, and game-state feedback are obvious.
- In 3D games, menu and HUD states do not fight camera control or pointer-lock.
- In 3D games, the first playable view keeps most of the viewport available for movement, aiming, and spatial reading.
- Persistent information density is low enough that screenshots still read as game scenes, not UI comps.
Anti-Patterns
- Generic app dashboard layouts
- Flat placeholder styling with no theme
- Default font stacks without intent
- Dense overlays that obscure the playfield
- Large title cards or multi-paragraph notes sitting over a live playable scene
- Equal-weight boxed panels distributed around every edge of the viewport
- Controls, objectives, notes, and lore all expanded at once on first load
- Full-width top-and-bottom chrome with large always-on center or body panels in 3D play
- Excessive motion on every element
- Canvas-only UI when DOM would be clearer and cheaper
- Forcing HUD controls into the 3D scene when standard DOM would be clearer
- Letting camera input remain active under modals or inventory panels
References
- Shared architecture:
../web-game-foundations/SKILL.md - Prompt recipes:
../../references/frontend-prompts.md - Low-chrome 3D layout patterns:
../../references/three-hud-layout-patterns.md - React-hosted 3D UI context:
../react-three-fiber-game/SKILL.md - Playtest review:
../../references/playtest-checklist.md