reone is a free and open source game engine, capable of running Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic and its sequel, The Sith Lords. We aim to provide an engine that can be used to:
The project is at a mid-stage of development: most engine subsystems have already been implemented, while game mechanics are actively being worked on. See project roadmap for our long-term plans.
reone adheres to clean-room design principles. We do not condone the use of decompilation - instead, we rely on publicly available information (e.g., file format specification provided by BioWare) and our own observations of the game and its resources.
We do not distribute copyrighted materials - instead, we require our users and developers to obtain a legal copy of the game.
Lastly, reone is explicitly a non-commercial project: we do not seek to gain profit, neither through donations nor other means.
To install reone, either download a prebuilt executable from the releases page, or build it from source. Building it requires a modern C++ compiler and a set of free and open source libraries. See detailed instructions for your operating system here.
reone is being developed and tested against unmodded Steam versions of both KotOR and TSL. Compatibility with any other version is not guaranteed, although GOG and retail versions should work with no or minor modification.
Install Visual C++ Redistributable to run prebuilt Windows executables.
Use launcher application to choose a game directory and launch reone. Alternatively, reone can be started from the command line: reone --game GAME_DIR
reone can be configured via the launcher, the configuration file or the command line.
Configuration file, named "reone.cfg", must be located in the current directory. See complete list of program options here.
reone is open to potential contributors. Contact us on this Discord server if you're interested in taking a particular task from the roadmap.
Developer resources:
reone is not the only project aiming to reimplement the Odyssey engine - there are at least four alternatives:
In contrast, this is what reone offers: