Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Computing
  4. Gaming
  5. Mobile
  6. Virtual Reality
  7. News

Google Maps is open to mobile AR game developers using Unity

Add as a preferred source on Google
Google Maps APIs Gaming

Google said on Wednesday. March 14 that Google Maps now supports the Unity engine to develop mobile games with an augmented reality component. The company’s new APIs — tools for building software — will turn buildings, roads, and parks into “GameObjects.” In turn, developers can add their own textures, styles, and customizations to these objects so they blend in with the game’s theme. This will reduce the rendering overhead caused by generating an entire virtual world on a global scale. 

Recommended Videos

“Game studios can easily reimagine our world as a medieval fantasy, a bubble gum candy land, or a zombie-infested post-apocalyptic city,” Clementine Jacoby, product manager of Google Maps APIs, said in a statement. “With Google Maps’ real-time updates and rich location data, developers can find the best places for playing games, no matter where their players are.” 

According to Google, developers using the Unity game engine now have access to more than 100 million 3D buildings, landmarks, parks, and roads scattered across more than 200 countries. Google Maps removes the need to know more about the player’s physical environment no matter where they are located across the globe. Google Maps also provides quick means to locate gameplay areas that are safe, pleasant, and fun for AR-based experiences. 

“Building on top of Google Maps’ global infrastructure means faster response times, the ability to scale on demand, and peace of mind knowing that your game will just work,” Jacoby adds. 

Google Maps support in Unity follows the launch of the company’s ARCore mobile augmented reality platform just before Barcelona’s Mobile World Congress show in February. Built specifically for Android, the kit allows developers to create apps supporting augmented reality on more than 100 million Android smartphones although, right now, it’s only compatible with 13 different handsets ranging from the Google Pixel to the Samsung Galaxy S8. More devices will support Google’s proprietary AR platform later this year. 

Augmented reality is a method of generating digital objects in the real world. For instance, Pokémon Go will use the phone’s camera to generate a live video feed on the screen while rendering a virtual Pokémon in that space. You can walk around the virtual creature, approach it or move away and it will still remain in its original position while scaling with the environment. 

But that is a simplistic case. Google’s new APIs for Google Maps will take that idea a huge step further by relying on existing objects but allowing developers to convert their original appearance. That means wherever gamers move in the physical space, the “augmented” environment stays true at every angle and position on the screen. 

The beauty of Google Maps is that not only do developers have access to all the current mapping information, the AR-based experiences will stay updated as Google continuously adds more buildings, roads, parks, and so on. According to Next Games CEO Teemu Huuhtanen, the added support for Google Maps will make “exploring your surroundings a breathtaking experience.” 

Google will display a live demo next week during the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco. 

Kevin Parrish
Kevin started taking PCs apart in the 90s when Quake was on the way and his PC lacked the required components. Since then…
Google starts testing Gmail Live, its new voice search tool for your inbox
The feature lets you ask questions about your inbox with your voice and is set to roll out later this summer.
Gmail Live screenshot on gradient background

At I/O this year, Google showcased Gmail Live, a new Gemini-powered feature that lets users search their inbox using their voice instead of typing. The feature has now moved into testing, with 9to5Google reporting that it's rolling out to a small group of Android and iOS users this week.

How Gmail Live works

Read more
Apple and Google sat for discussions to unlock 50W wireless charging for smartphones
Wireless Charger

The next major leap in wireless charging may not come from a flashy smartphone launch, but from behind closed doors where some of the biggest names in the tech industry are working together, according to an ITHome report.

Apple, Google, Xiaomi, and several other leading technology companies recently gathered in Beijing for the Wireless Power Consortium's (WPC) Qi Off-cycle Meeting, where discussions centered around the upcoming Qi 50W wireless charging standard. The four-day event, hosted by Xiaomi, focused on refining technical specifications, testing prototype hardware, and ensuring devices from different brands can work seamlessly together.

Read more
Minimal Phone 2 looks like a deliberate antidote to doomscrolling
The coming phone leans on a keyboard, calmer software, and a smaller body to fight smartphone overload.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

Minimal Phone 2 has entered waitlist mode with a clear promise. Minimal says its next phone is coming soon with a smaller, more refined design, a better keyboard, an aluminum body, and improved software.

The first Minimal Phone already tested whether people wanted an Android device that slowed phone use down without cutting off everyday tools. Its e-paper screen and physical keyboard made endless feeds less comfortable, while keeping apps, messaging, payments, and other basics within reach.

Read more