Intro to Unity Physics — Part 2 Colliders and Triggers

Marc Hewitt
3 min readMay 7, 2021

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OnTrigger() { If(Player) { turn Green; }} OnCollission() { TurnOnGravity; }

Colliders

The main reason to use any Physics System is you want to know when two objects hit without doing all the math yourself.

The typical ones to use are boxes, capsules, spheres. Sometimes Terrian, and sometimes Mesh. Mesh can become a performance issue if used willy nilly on large models though, so like discussed in part 1, “Close Enough” is good enough. So you might just put a box or capsule around something instead of a Mesh.

Lots of choices!

3D vs 2D Colliders

Both are great and optimized for their individual roles.

BUT you need to understand the one rule! You can not mix 3D Physics colliders with 2D Physics colliders. This is because they are technically different physics engines which means you need a Rigidbody2D to interact with 2D colliders.

What you are allowed to do, however, is have a 2D Sprite (2D visuals) with a 3D Box Collider (3D physics) interacting with a 3D Rigidbody. Setting up this way would allow you to interact with 3D models, even if the visuals look 2d.

OnCollider vs OnTrigger and How to Use

Colliders engage directly with the physics systems, triggers ignore physics applied to it. Triggers are very useful for “Zones” where you want something to trigger. Maybe an“Activation Zone” before a button prompt pops up and allowing player input.

For either of these events to work, you require at least one of the objects involved to have a Rigidbody. Without this, the physics system doesn’t know it should care about the collider involved.

Example OnTrigger()

To create the trigger we simply need to check the “Is Trigger” box on the Collider and then adjust the collider to fill in the zone we want to fill.

To adjust the collider we can click the “Edit Collider” button and then drag the anchor points, or manually type in the center/size of the collider.

Showing where to click to edit the collider
You can notice that the moment the sphere “touches” the trigger box it Activates.

The Trigger Code for this example:

Dropped on the “TriggerExample” Game Object

Collisions

Collisions work the same way as triggers but they’ll push back with their own physics settings. The only other difference is in code we use OnCollission.

Now an important thing to learn with OnCollision is making sure you know how to filter out collisions. You don’t want your own projectile attack that’s firing usually close enough to you for example to trigger your collider and damage you for example.

So to avoid hitting our selves with our own attacks, we use Tags or Layers.

Tags let us select our Player

This way when the Player shoots a basic projectile if the shot happens to overlap with the player collider on spawn he won’t take damage.

Next Up:

Part 3 will be going over Physics Materials and Part 4 Joints.

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Marc Hewitt
Marc Hewitt

Written by Marc Hewitt

An Austin TX Unity3d Developer with a unique background in marketing, design, & software development leading digital web agencies to success for the past decade