A curated list of awesome resources, demos, games, and projects related to the Babylon.js 3D engine.
Awesome Babylon.js is a curated list of resources, demos, games, and projects related to the Babylon.js game and rendering engine. It helps developers discover tools, examples, and community content to build 3D and immersive web experiences. The list is maintained by the community and serves as a valuable entry point for learning and inspiration.
Web developers, game developers, and 3D graphics enthusiasts looking to explore or build with Babylon.js. It's especially useful for those seeking practical examples, starter projects, and community resources.
It saves developers time by aggregating the best Babylon.js content in one place, from official docs to cutting-edge community demos. The list is actively curated, ensuring quality and relevance for both beginners and advanced users.
A curated list of awesome things related to Babylon.js
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Aggregates official documentation, books, playgrounds, and community links in one place, saving developers time searching for Babylon.js content across the web.
Features hundreds of curated playground demos and official showcases, offering hands-on learning for physics, shaders, WebXR, and game mechanics.
Encourages and guides community submissions via contributing guidelines, ensuring the list stays current with valuable projects and trends.
Includes resources for WebGL, WebGPU, WebXR, and Babylon Native, highlighting the engine's versatility in building diverse 3D experiences.
As a static list, it lacks interactive features or real-time updates; users must manually explore links without quality guarantees or version tracking.
The sheer volume of demos and links—like the lengthy 'Playground' section—can be disorienting without structured guidance or beginner-friendly filters.
Relies on external sources that may become outdated, broken, or poorly maintained over time, with no built-in verification or maintenance alerts.
Does not offer integrated development tools or code editors; it's purely a reference list, requiring users to switch contexts for actual implementation.