A curated list of awesome Unity assets, resources, and projects for game development.
Awesome Unity is a curated, community-driven collection of high-quality assets, resources, and tools for Unity game development. It organizes useful libraries, frameworks, plugins, and tutorials into categories like 2D, AI, networking, and UI, helping developers quickly find reliable solutions to enhance their projects. The list prioritizes free resources and serves as a centralized reference for the Unity ecosystem.
Unity developers, game designers, and indie studios looking for trusted assets, tools, and learning resources to accelerate development and improve game quality.
Developers choose Awesome Unity because it saves time by filtering the vast Unity asset ecosystem into a well-organized, quality-focused list. It provides a community-vetted directory of tools and resources, reducing the risk of using unproven or low-quality assets.
A curated list of awesome Unity assets, resources, and more.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
The list is handpicked to include proven, useful resources across categories like 2D, AI, and networking, prioritizing free options and saving developers from sifting through unvetted assets.
Resources are clearly divided into sections such as Frameworks, Input, and Tweening, making it easy to navigate and find specific tools without overwhelming clutter.
While archived, it was open to contributions, allowing the Unity community to suggest and vet resources, which helped build a trusted, collaborative directory over time.
Features example games and tutorials that demonstrate real-world applications, such as Nodulus for puzzle games, providing learning opportunities beyond just asset lists.
The repository is explicitly marked as archived since the maintainer no longer uses Unity, meaning it hasn't been updated for years, leading to potentially broken links, deprecated assets, or incompatibility with newer Unity versions.
As a static list, it misses recent developments in Unity, such as new asset store releases, updates to tools like Unity's Netcode, or shifts in VR/AR SDKs, reducing its relevance for current projects.
With contributions halted and no active curation, users cannot rely on it for support, bug fixes, or additions, making it a passive reference rather than a living resource.