A curated list of awesome ARKit projects, tutorials, and resources for iOS augmented reality development.
Awesome ARKit is a curated GitHub repository that aggregates open-source projects, tutorials, App Store examples, and resources related to Apple's ARKit framework. It helps developers discover and learn how to create augmented reality applications for iOS by providing a centralized, community-maintained list of references and inspiration.
iOS developers, AR enthusiasts, and educators looking to build or learn about augmented reality experiences on Apple devices using ARKit, SceneKit, Metal, and related technologies.
It saves developers significant time by collecting and organizing the best ARKit resources in one place, offering immediate access to code examples, learning materials, and real-world app inspirations to accelerate AR development.
A curated list of awesome ARKit projects and resources. Feel free to contribute!
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Offers a wide range of open-source ARKit apps, such as measurement tools like 'ARuler' and games like 'ARTetris,' providing practical code bases to learn from and modify.
Aggregates tutorials from blogs and courses, covering topics from basic plane detection to advanced CoreML integration, as listed in the Tutorials section.
Includes links to published App Store apps like 'IKEA Place' and 'Magic Sudoku,' giving insights into commercial AR success stories and design patterns.
Open to contributions via GitHub pull requests, allowing the list to evolve with new projects and resources, fostering a collaborative ecosystem.
The list does not vet or test linked projects, so some resources may be buggy, outdated, or poorly documented, requiring extra diligence from users.
Resources are listed without a learning sequence, making it difficult for newcomers to navigate without prior ARKit knowledge or external guidance.
As a GitHub repository, updates depend on community pull requests, which can lead to delays in reflecting new ARKit features or fixing broken links.