Note: Unity Remote Config is now available as a preview packageA preview* package is in development and not yet ready for production. A package in preview might be at any stage of development, from the initial stages to near completion.
See in Glossary. Remote Config is an improved offering that allows you to change the behavior and appearance of your game without requiring a new binary. You can remotely enable or disable features, change the specifics of your game to target specific audiences, or run special events by scheduling new content releases.*
When you create a Remote Settings key-value pair in the Unity AnalyticsA data platform that provides analytics for your Unity game. More info
See in Glossary Dashboard, the Unity AnalyticsAbbreviation of Unity Analytics
See in Glossary Service stores that setting in the Configuration for your project that you have specified (either the Release or the Development configuration). Whenever a player starts a new session of your application, Unity makes a network request for the latest configuration from the Analytics Service. Unity considers a new session to have started when the player launches the application, or returns to an application that has been in the background for at least 30 minutes. Unity requests the Release configuration when running regular, non-development builds of your application, and requests the Development configuration when running development builds. Play mode in the Unity Editor counts as a development build.
Note: For Unity to request the Development configuration, you must build the application with Unity version 5.6.0p4+, 5.6.1p1+, 2017.1+, or Unity 5.5.3p4+, and tick the Development BuildA development build includes debug symbols and enables the Profiler. More info
See in Glossary checkbox on the Build Settings window. If you build the game with an older version of Unity, Unity always requests the Release configuration.
When the network request for the Remote Settings configuration is complete, the RemoteSettings object dispatches an Updated
event to any registered event handlers, including those registered by Remote Settings components.
If the computer or device has no Internet connection and cannot communicate with the Analytics Service, Unity uses the last configuration it received and saved. The RemoteSettings
object still dispatches an Updated
event when using a saved configuration. However, if Unity has not saved the settings yet (such as when a player has no network connection the first time they run your game), then the RemoteSettings
object does not dispatch an Updated
event, and so does not update your game variables. Requesting the Remote Settings configuration over the network is an asynchronous process that might not complete before your initial SceneA Scene contains the environments and menus of your game. Think of each unique Scene file as a unique level. In each Scene, you place your environments, obstacles, and decorations, essentially designing and building your game in pieces. More info
See in Glossary has finished loading, or might not complete at all, so you should always initialize your game variables to reasonable defaults.
Note: The web service from which Unity downloads the Remote Settings configuration is read-only, but is not secured. This means that the configuration could be read by third-parties. You should not put sensitive or secret information into your Remote Settings. Similarly, the saved settings file could be read and modified by end-users (although any modifications are overwritten the next time a session starts with an available Internet connection).
2017–05–30 Page published
2017–05–30 - Service compatible with Unity 5.5 onwards at this date but version compatibility may be subject to change.
New feature in 2017.1