www.muse.place · demo · discord
The mission of spacesvr is to organize and implement the standards for experiencing 3D content on the web in the same way that there exists standards for experiencing 2D content with HTML/CSS/JS.
spacesvr is designed to empower the artist. Instead of worrying about file structures or basic functionality like cross-device compatability, artists should spend their time telling their story. As such, consumption is optimized for simplicity, and the organization provides a framework to tell stories.
spacesvr is actively maintained by Muse, a YC-backed startup that provides tooling for visually building worlds. Muse's mission is to accelerate the adoption of 3D websites by increasing their accessibility, both for the end user and for the creator. Muse is completely built on spacesvr.
- Visit the codesandbox to instantly play with the package
- Clone the starter repo to start using with Next.js
- Sign up for muse to build using our no-code editor
You could set up the framework in your sleep. Just import the package
yarn add spacesvr #or npm install spacesvr
and copy/paste 9 lines of code
import { StandardReality, LostWorld } from "spacesvr";
function World() {
return (
<StandardReality>
<LostWorld /> // an example world with a floor, skybox, and fog
</StandardReality>
);
}
this is the starting point for this demo
From this point, your creations will be built by directly using the following technologies:
- @react-three/fiber, the most important to learn
- @react-three/drei, a repository of components and utilities
- @react-three/cannon, for physics
- @react-spring/three, for animations
Under the hood and mostly abstracted away are the following technologies:
- three.js, an abstract 3D API for the web
- @react-three/xr, for any VR-specific interactions
- peerjs, for networking
the following are each a fundamental unit and their own folder at the top level of spacesvr, with the pattern recursively re-appearing throughout the repository
ideas are the fundamental building blocks of your world. They are the 3D the equivalent of HTML Elements. They are implemented as React components.
layers (of reality) offer new functionality to the world. They are implemented using a React container component, a context, and a corresponding hook.
logic offers functions to be used when composing your world. They are implemented as individually exported functions and hooks.
realities define how the player experiences your world. They are comparable in function to a browser. They are implemented as a React container component and composed of an ordering of layers.
tools offer the player affordances in your world. They are the 3D equivalent of a browser toolbar. They are implemented using a Layer for fundamental state a modifier for registry.
worlds are sets of ideas. They are the actual content of your site. They are implemented as compositions of ideas.
The Standard Reality defines the standard experiencing the 3D web. The layers provided are, in order: Environment, Physics, Player, Toolbelt, Network, Visual. Additionally, it provides an infinite ground to walk on that can be disabled.
<StandardReality
environmentProps={{...}} // props to be passed to the environment layer
physicsProps={{...}} // props to be passed to the physics layer
playerProps={{...}} // props to be passed to the player layer
networkProps={{...}} // props to be passed to network layer
disableGround={true} // disable ground in case you want your own
/>
The base layer that abstracts away the DOM, allowing you to think only in 3D
type EnvironmentProps = {
name?: string; // set the name of your environment, shows up in the pause menu
pauseMenu?: ReactNode; // for you to provide a custom pause menu
loadingScreen?: ReactNode; // for you to provide a custom loading screen
dev?: boolean; // hides the pause menu, useful while switching between world and IDE
canvasProps?: Partial<ContainerProps>; // to edit the r3f canvas props
};
const environmentState = useEnvironment();
type EnvironmentState = {
name: string;
paused: boolean;
setPaused: (p: boolean) => void;
device: DeviceState; // the current device being used by the player: xr, mobile, or desktop
containerRef: MutableRefObject<HTMLDivElement | null>;
};
Provides a default physics configuration
import { PhysicsProps as ProviderProps } from "@react-three/cannon";
type PhysicsProps = ProviderProps;
Provides a user-controlled entity with a standardized set of controls that work cross-platform (VR/Mobile/Desktop)
type PlayerProps = {
pos?: number[]; // initial player position
rot?: number; // initial player rotation (radians along Y axis)
speed?: number; // player movement speed
controls?: {
disableGyro?: boolean; // used to disable gyroscope prompt on mobile
};
};
const playerState = usePlayer();
type PlayerState = {
position: PlayerVec; //.get() and .set() for position
velocity: PlayerVec; //.get() and .set() for velocity
controls: PlayerControls; //.lock() and .unlock() for stopping player movement
raycaster: Raycaster; // reference to player's raycaster
};
Provides a layer of UX to offer user interaction with the world.
type ToolbeltProps = {
showOnSpawn?: boolean; // whether to show the toolbelt on spawn, default true
};
const toolbelt = useToolbelt();
type ToolbeltState = {
tools: Tool[];
activeTool?: Tool;
hide: () => void;
next: () => void;
prev: () => void;
show: () => void;
activeIndex: number | undefined;
setActiveIndex: (i: number) => void;
direction: Direction;
};
Provides multiplayer out-of-the-box. Muse provides signalling servers and STUN/TURN servers for everyone :).
type NetworkProps = {
autoconnect?: boolean; // whether to automatically attempt a p2p connection, false by default
disableEntities?: boolean; // whether to hide users from seeing each other, in case you want to implement yourself
iceServers?: RTCIceServer[]; // set of ice servers to use (recommended for production!!)
host?: string; // signalling host url, uses Muse's servers by default
sessionId?: string; // if you know the session id you want to use, enter it here
worldName?: string; // the worldname to hash your signal peers by, by default set to the path name
voice?: boolean; // whether to enable spatial voice chat, false by default
};
const networkState = useNetwork();
type NetworkState = {
connected: boolean; // whether the user has established connection with signalling server
connect: (config?: ConnectionConfig) => Promise<void>; // when autoconnect is off, use this to manually connect
connections: Map<string, DataConnection>; // reference to active peer connections
disconnect: () => void;
voice: boolean; // whether voice is enabled
setVoice: (v: boolean) => void; // enable/disable voice
mediaConnections: Map<string, MediaConnection>; // reference to active media connections
useChannel: <Data = any, State = any>(
id: string,
type: ChannelType,
reducer: Reducer<Data, State>
) => Channel<Data, State>; // set up a data channel to standardize communication between peers
};
A tool that gives the user a camera to take pictures with. To add to your toolbelt simply add it into the World.
<StandardReality>
<Camera />
</StandardReality>
A tool to configure your microphone settings. Automatically added if voice chat is enabled in the network layer.
- basis/ for visualizations of fundamental metaphysics
- environment/ for setting up the environment
- media/ for importing common media types
- mediated/ for some basic art assets
- modifiers/ for modifying other ideas. they don't render anything themselves
- ui/ for guiding and interacting with the user
Visualize an Idea
<VisualIdea idea={new Idea()} />
Visualize a Site
<VisualSite idea={new Site()} />
Visualize a World
<VisualWorld idea={new World()} />
Set the background color of your space
<Background color="blue" />
Add fog to your scene.
<Fog color="white" near={10} far={100} />
Adds an infinite plane to walk on (added by default with the Environment Layer)
<InfinitePlane
height={-0.0001} // offset a slight amount
size={[100, 100]}
visible={false}
/>
A positional audio component that will play the passed in audio url. Handles media playback rules for Safari, iOS, etc.
<Audio
url="https://link-to-your-audio.mp3"
position={[0, 4, 0]}
volume={1}
rollOff={1}
dCone={new Vector3(coneInnerAngle, coneOuterAngle, coneOuterGain)} // defaults should be fine
fftSize={128}
/>
Set the scene background to an hdr file. You can find free hdr files here: https://hdrihaven.com/
<HDRI
src="https://link-to-your-hdri.hdr"
disableBackground={false} // used to disable visual hdr (skybox)
disableEnvironment={false} // used to disable environment map
/>
Quickly add an image to your scene
<Image
src="https://link-to-your-image.png"
size={1} // size, default normalized to longest side = 1
framed // adds a frame
/>
Quickly add a GLTF/GLB model to your scene. Will handle Suspense, KTX2, Draco, Meshopt. Clones the gltf scene so the same file can be re-used.
<Model
src="https://link-to-your-model.glb"
center // whether to center the model so its bounds are centered on its origin, default false
normalize // whether to normalize the model to a height/width/depth of 1, default false
/>
Add a video file to your space with positional audio. Handles media playback rules for Safari, iOS, etc.
<Video
src="https://link-to-your-video.mp4"
size={1} // size, default normalized to longest side = 1
volume={1}
muted // mutes the video
framed // adds a frame
/>
Builds a frame to showcase media, especially images.
width: number; height: number; thickness?: number; material?: Material; innerFrameMaterial?: Material;
<Frame
width={1}
height={1}
thickness={0.1} // optional, default 0.1
material={new MeshBasicMaterial({ color: "red" })} // optional, default is a black MeshStandardMaterial
innerFrameMaterial={new MeshBasicMaterial({ color: "blue" })} // optional, default is no inner frame
/>
An infinite floor styled to the Lost World.
<LostFloor />
Enables colliders for its children either by a named collider mesh or using all meshes and capping collective triangle count to triLimit prop.
<Collidable
triLimit={1000} // max number of triangles before it uses bvh
enabled={true}
hideCollisionMeshes={false} // set visible to false on meshes used for collision
/>
Makes its children react to onclick and on hover methods
<Interactable
onClick={() => console.log("Ive been clicked!")}
onHovered={() => console.log("Ive been hovered!")}
onUnHovered={() => console.log("Ive been unhovered?")}
>
<Stuff />
</Interactable>
Turns its children into a tool, automatically registers it with the Tool Layer.
<Tool
name="My Tool" // name used for identification
pos={[0, 0]} // where the tool should be positioned in screen space, x:[-1, 1], y:[-1, 1]
face={true} // whether the tool should face the user, default true
pinY={false} // whether the tool should be pinned on the screen space y so user can look up and down
range={0} // how far from the cursor the tool will stay without moving left or ight, along the x screen space axis, measured in degrees
orderIndex={0} // the order in which the tool should be rendered relative to other orders, default 0, sorts low to high
onSwitch={(enabled: boolean) => {}} // callback for when active tool switches, passes whether the given tool is enabled
>
<Stuff />
</Tool>
Makes its children link out to when clicked. handles leaving vr session.
<Anchor
href="https://link-to-your-website.com"
target="_blank" // optional, default is _self
>
<Stuff />
</Anchor>
Turns its children into a billboard, always facing the camera.
<FacePlayer enabled={true} lockX={false} lockY={false} lockZ={false} />
Lazily floats its children.
<Floating height={0.2} speed={1} />
Makes its children face the player, but with easing.
<LookAtPlayer enabled={true} />
Makes its children spin
<Spinning xSpeed={0} ySpeed={1} zSpeed={0} />
Adds a render pass to the Visual Layer's render pipeline. Use to add postprocessing.
<VisualEffect
index={1} // the order in which the effects are applied, sorts low to high
>
<unrealBloomPass args={[new Vector2(256, 256), 0.1, 0.01, 0.95]} />
</VisualEffect>
A text input component made to mimic an HTML input element. Supports all shortcuts, drag to select, shift click, double/triple click.
const [text, setText] = useState("");
<TextInput
type="text" // text | password | number, default is text
value={text} // control the input value
onChange={setText} // optional onChange function
onSubmit={(s: string) => console.log(s)} // optional onSubmit function, called when enter is pressed
onFocus={() => console.log("focused")} // optional onFocus function
onBlur={() => console.log("blurred")} // optional onBlur function
font={"https://link-to-your-font.ttf"} // optional font
fontSize={0.1} // font size, default 0.1
width={1} // width, default 1
placeholder="Enter your name" // optional placeholder text
/>;
An arrow icon
<Arrow dark={false} />
A simple button
<Button
onClick={() => console.log("Ive been clicked!")}
font="https://link-to-your-font.ttf" // optional font, default is Quicksand
fontSize={0.1} // font size, default 0.05
maxWidth={1} // max width, default no max width
textColor="red" // text color, default black
color="green" // button color, default white
outline={false} // whether to show an outline, default true
outlineColor="#9f9f9f" // outline color, default white
>
Click me!
</Button>
A Keyboard Key that responds to the corresponding key press. Useful for tutorials.
<Key
keyCode="a"
keyPress={["a, A"]} // optional, default is keyCode, but in case there are multiple keys to look for
onPressed={(evt) => console.log("Ive been pressed!")} // optional callback when key is pressed
/>
A boolean switch
const [value, setValue] = useState(false);
<Switch
value={value} // control the switch value
onChange={setValue} // optional onChange function
/>;