Mechanics

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Combat taking place on 2Fort.
And that is how you do it, men!
The Soldier demonstrating success.

The mechanics of Team Fortress 2 define the rules and capabilities for players, servers, and content editors. Understanding these mechanics allows for more streamlined and comprehensive gameplay.

Engine

Source engine logo.png
Main article: Source Engine

Team Fortress 2 runs on The Orange Box version of the Source Engine, designed to run on Microsoft Windows, Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Mac OS X and Linux. The Orange Box engine adds hardware face rendering, soft particles, and multicore rendering over the old Source Engine. TF2 is optimized and balanced for game sizes of 24 players or fewer (18 on an Xbox 360 and 16 on a PS3), even though servers may host as many as 32 players if they desire (PC/Mac only). All player actions and options are handled as console commands and variables which are known as ConVars.

Classes

From left to right: Pyro, Engineer, Spy, Heavy, Sniper, Scout, Soldier, Demoman, and Medic.
Main article: Classes

There are nine playable classes in Team Fortress 2, which are categorized into three areas- "Offense", "Defense", and "Support", though these categorizations have no impact on gameplay. The abilities and stats of classes can change based on loadout.

Leaderboard class scout.png Scout: An offensive class with 133% move speed and 125 health points, specializing in hit-and-run combat and objective-capturing. Can double jump and capture control points (and push Payload carts) at a rate equivalent to 2 people. The Scout is armed with the Scattergun, a Pistol, and a Bat by default.
Leaderboard class soldier.png Soldier: An offensive class with 80% move speed and 200 health points, able to adapt to a variety of situations, making him great for both attack and defense. Can rocket jump to reach normally unreachable places. The Soldier is armed with the Rocket Launcher, a Shotgun, and a Shovel by default.
Leaderboard class pyro.png Pyro: An offensive class with 100% move speed and 175 health points, ideal for close quarters combat and group support. Can ignite enemies, use compression blast to reflect projectiles and extinguish teammates, and is not affected by afterburn from fire-based attacks. The Pyro is armed with the Flamethrower, a Shotgun, and a Fire Axe by default.
Leaderboard class demoman.png Demoman: A defensive class with 93.33% move speed and 175 health points, specializing in area denial and damage output. Can sticky jump. The Demoman is armed with the Grenade Launcher, a Stickybomb Launcher, and a Bottle by default.
Leaderboard class heavy.png Heavy: A defensive class with 76.67% move speed and 300 health points, excelling in dealing and receiving sustained damage. The Heavy is armed with the Minigun, a Shotgun, and his own Fists by default.
Leaderboard class engineer.png Engineer: A defensive class with 100% move speed and 125 health points that specializes in area denial and support. Can create, maintain, upgrade, move, and control buildings. The Engineer is armed with a Shotgun, a Pistol, a Wrench, and a PDA by default.
Leaderboard class medic.png Medic: A support class with 106.67% move speed and 150 health points that focuses on improving the longevity and efficiency of teammates. Regenerates health passively and is capable of healing teammates and deploying ÜberCharges on both teammates and himself. The Medic is armed with the Syringe Gun, a Medi Gun, and a Bonesaw by default.
Leaderboard class sniper.png Sniper: A support class with 100% move speed and 125 health points, ideal for long-distance target elimination. Can headshot. The Sniper is armed with the Sniper Rifle, a Submachine Gun, and a Kukri by default.

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Leaderboard class spy.png Spy: A support class with 107% move speed and 125 health points, ideal for covert disruption and assassination. Can disguise, sap, Cloak, headshot (With Ambassador only) and backstab. The Spy is armed with the Revolver, a Sapper, a butterfly knife, a Disguise Kit, and an Invisibility Watch by default.

Combat

Combat is the primary means through which opposing teams compete for objectives. Team Fortress 2 has a variety of mechanics that influence combat, such as explosives, Sentry Guns, shotguns, etc.

Damage

How damage is affected by distance.
Main articles: Damage, Critical hits
See also: Health

Most weapons deal damage to health points. Unless the server is modded, weapons do not cause damage to teammates, though many weapons are capable of damaging their user. Weapon damage is subject to a number of variables, though the vast majority of weapons don't deal locational damage (the main exceptions being Sniper or Spy headshots and Spy backstabs). Most weapons deal increased damage to targets that are nearby and reduced damage to targets that are far away, though mini-crits are not subject to the latter and critical hits are subject to neither. Distance modifiers to damage are based on the distance between attacker and target on-hit (as opposed to the position of the attacker when the attack was first made). Explosive damage is reduced as the target's distance from the explosion's center increases. While most explosive weapons can hurt their users, the Soldier and Demoman are granted damage reduction to their own explosive attacks.

Critical hit chance based on recent damage.

Unless disabled by a server setting, most weapons have a randomized modifier to damage (approximately ±15%) and can also semi-randomly become critical hits. Critical hits are not subject to damage randomization or distance-based damage modifiers, and always deal 300% of the weapon's base damage. Critical attacks are usually accompanied by team-colored visual effects and electric shock sound effects (most noticeably on explosive projectiles). Usually, non-melee attacks have a 2-12% chance to become critical based on recent damage output while melee attacks have a 15-25% chance; however, some weapons, like the Market Gardener, are unable to get random critical hits. When hit by a critical attack, text appears above the target's head, a distinct hit sound is played, and the target is subject to greatly increased knockback. Critical attacks do not deal extra damage or knockback to their users, though they may provide visual or audio cues that suggest they do. Critical hits do not stack onto a single attack.

A variety of weapons and status effects can cause mini-crits. Mini-crits function similarly to critical hits, though they only deal 135% base damage, provide less knockback than a full critical hit, and do not produce the same audio-visual effects. Additionally, while critical hits deal the same damage regardless of distance, mini-crits are subject to damage ramp-up when attacking from close range. If an attack would be both a mini-crit and a critical hit, it will function as though it were only a critical hit. Like critical attacks, mini-crit attacks do not cause increased damage to their users.

Buildings are not subject to extra damage from critical hits and mini-crits, nor are attacks against them modified by distance. Likewise, attacks made by buildings themselves are not subject to distance-based damage modifiers and cannot become critical hits, though they still may become mini-crits.

Hit detection

Disguises don't have matching hitboxes.
Main articles: Projectiles, Hitscan

Most weapons are either projectile weapons or hitscan weapons.

  • Projectile weapons, such as the Rocket Launcher, produce moving objects with positioning and effects determined by the server's game state, which can make them less reliable for players with high latency. Projectiles usually have unique rules of physics applied to them separate from the player, and player velocity is not used in determining the initial velocity of projectiles. Projectiles do not spawn from center-screen, but from the side on which the weapon is held (a right-handed Soldier produces rockets from his right-hand side). Projectile collision detection does not use model-conforming hitboxes; instead, projectile hit detection relies on a single, large hitbox, also used for collisions with the map and other players, that completely encompass the player model, and does not vary based on the players class or state, except for crouching (for example, a standing Heavy has the same projectile hit detection as a running Scout, but different from a crouched one). The Pyro's particle-based flame attacks follow most projectile weapon mechanics.
  • Hitscan weapons, such as the Minigun produce instant hit-or-miss attacks instead of projectiles. Melee weapons and bullet/pellet-producing weapons are generally hitscan. Hitscan weapons determine collision based on the game state of the attacker (as opposed to projectiles, which use the server's game state), which can produce somewhat disjointed hit detection ("I already got behind cover; how did that hit me?"). Hitscan weapons are produced from center-screen, even if visual effects seem to suggest otherwise. Non-melee hitscan weapons use fairly accurate model-fitting hitboxes (a standing Heavy would indeed be a much larger target than a standing Scout); melee weapons use the same large hitbox used by projectile weapons.
    • Non-melee hitscan weapons will fire a bullet or at least one pellet perfectly accurate down the crosshair if the weapon has not been fired for at least 1.25 seconds (notably, the Sniper Rifle's shots always occur after this period). After an accurate shot, the weapon will incur a period of slight inaccuracy unless the weapon is held from firing for 1.25 seconds. The two exceptions to this rule, the Ambassador and the Enforcer, are affected by a shorter period of inaccuracy, lasting only until the crosshair has shrunk to its normal size for the Ambassador and an equal amount of time for the Enforcer. This period is a little less than a second long (about 0.9s).

Weapon types

Main article: Weapons
See also: Ammo

Each class has a unique set of weapons at their disposal occupying weapon slots 1, 2, and 3 (often referred to as primary, secondary, and melee, respectively). Some classes may have additional slots, such as the Engineer's PDA and Spy's Disguise Kit. The choices players make in choosing weapons and items constitutes their loadout.

Most non-melee weapons require Ammo for use. Weapons that use Ammo can be either reserve-based (having a limited clip size and requiring reloading from stored ammo, such as the Pistol) or fully-loaded (capable of using all ammo without reloading, such as the Minigun). Reserve-based weapons either use magazine-style reloading (reload fills loaded ammo in single, one-time animation, such as the Revolver) or sequential reloading (reloads ammo from reserve one at a time, such as the Shotgun). Reloading can be interrupted at any time by attacking or changing weapons, though time spent reloading (beyond the last carried ammo increment, in the case of sequential weapons) is wasted. When reloading a sequential reload weapon, a different animation and reload time is used for reloading the first ammo and subsequent ammo (for example, an emptied Grenade Launcher takes 1.24 seconds to reload 1 ammo, plus 0.6 seconds for each ammo after that).

Many weapons that don't use ammo must be recharged instead (such as Jarate). Recharging can usually be done by waiting for a set amount of time, going to the resupply cabinet, or respawning. Some weapons without ammo require manual refill based on specific requirements, such as the Medi Gun (which requires refill for ÜberCharge, though not for healing) and the Buff Banner.

Status effects

The Heavy under the effect of a crit boost from the Kritzkrieg of the Medic, who is in turn under the effect of an enemy Scout's Mad Milk.
See also: Weapons

Status effects include a variety of weapon-induced player conditions, such as Fire and Bleeding. All status effects are removed by death, touching a Resupply Locker or class change, and most negative effects are removed by ÜberCharge. Some can be removed by healing or submersion in water. There are both positive and negative effects.

Positive effects

Negative effects

Knock back

Main article: Knockback
See also: Jumping

Most weapons produce at least some sort of knockback, much of which is too small to notice. Attack modifiers to knockback include damage, critical hit or mini-crit status, and weapon-specific effects. Knockback can be used to manipulate the positioning and movement of players, especially those of enemies through juggling, and oneself through rocket jumping or sticky jumping. Some weapons and abilities, such as the Force-A-Nature and compression blast, are based on unique knock back functionality. ÜberCharged targets are less influenced by enemy knockback than normal targets, and Megahealed players and Disguised Spies are not subject to knockback from enemy weapons, but a compression blast will affect Disguised Spies.

Environment

Depending on the map and server, the goals and rules of TF2 gameplay can change dramatically. By understanding these variables in gameplay (and how to parse them in the Server Browser), players can find a game environment that suits them and fully contribute to their team's goals.

Objectives

A defensive team guarding a control point on Gravel Pit.
Main article: List of game modes

Maps are made based on a variety of game modes, which are used to determine the objectives for both teams. Teams may compete over the same goals (such as in Push Control Point and King of the Hill maps) or oppose each other in an offense vs. defense setup (such as in Attack/Defend Control Point and standard Payload maps).

Many game modes use control points. Control points begin to be captured when a player of a team not owning the point stands on the point. The capture time varies by map, and its speed is increased when more players stand on it (though each player beyond the first provides diminishing returns). Capture is halted when an opposing team member stands on it in defense, and capture progress is gradually undone when no capturing teammates stand on the point. Control points cannot be captured while "locked", and locked points are usually unlocked after preceding points are captured. Payload carts are pushed and halted the same way control points are captured, though instead of capturing a Payload cart, the pushing team tries to bring it to a checkpoint. ÜberCharged players cannot capture points or push carts, though they can defend them.

In official maps with offense vs. defense game modes, BLU plays offense while RED plays defense. In such maps, BLU tends to have faster respawn times, but RED is given a setup time to prepare a robust defense.

  • Arena: Players spawn only at the beginning of the round, with no respawning. After a set time, a neutral control point unlocks, which can be captured to win the round. If all members of a team die, that team loses the round. Has First Blood and automated team assignment/shuffling by default. Official arena maps don't have resupply Lockers.
  • Capture the Flag (CTF): Teams work to capture the opposing side's Intelligence faster than their opponents do the same. Any player can pick up an enemy's Intelligence, and their team gains a point if that player returns the enemy's Intelligence to their team's own original Intelligence spot. The Intelligence drops on command or when its carrier dies; it is returned to its original location if it remains on the ground for a set time after being dropped.
  • Control Point, Push (CP): Each team starts with two locked control points and fight for the middle, neutral control point. From then on, at any given time, each team's furthest control point is unlocked, while all others are locked. Teams must capture all five control points to win the round.
  • Control Point, Attack/Defend (CP): If the offensive team captures all of the defense's control points before time runs out, they win (if the defense can prevent this, they win). In most maps, only one or two control points are unlocked at a time (the notable exception being Steel).
  • King of the Hill (KOTH): Each team has their own countdown timer, and a team wins when their countdown timer reaches zero. A team's timer counts down while they own the control point, but is frozen while that team does not have ownership of the control point. Note that a team's timer will still count down even if there are enemies trying to capture the point.
  • Mann vs. Machine (MVM): A team composed of up to six human players must fend off waves of AI-controlled robots, stopping them from delivering a bomb to the map's stronghold. Players are able to collect cash from destroyed robots and buy upgrades between waves. Offense wins if successfully deliver the bomb, while defense wins by successfully Ward off all the waves.
  • Payload (PL): Offense pushes the Payload cart in a manner similar to capturing a control point, trying to reach checkpoints instead of finishing point captures. The Payload cart supports allies as if it were a level 1 Dispenser. Offense wins if the cart reaches the final checkpoint, while defense wins by making sure the cart doesn't reach the final point before the timer counts down to 0.
  • Payload Race (PLR): Essentially identical to Payload, but instead of offense vs. defense, each team pushes their own cart in an attempt to reach the finish before the opposing team does.
  • Special Delivery (SD): CTF-streetball, an initially neutral briefcase of Australium must be transported to Poopy Joe's rocket before the opposing team can do the same.
  • Territorial Control (TC): Each team is randomly assigned territories, and rounds consist of each team trying to contest one of their opponent's control points (while the opposing team tries to capture one of theirs). Most of the map is locked during gameplay, consisting of only one territory vs. one territory. After enough successive wins, another round takes place at the losing side's base point, which they must defend against the offense-only opposing team.
  • Training Mode (TR): Training maps are for practicing skills against obstacles and/or bots and learning through tutorials. They are often played with only one human player, or at the very least, no opposing human sides.

Map elements

Left to right: 100% health kit, Sandvich, 50% ammo pack.
See also: Respawn, Pickups

Players start the round in their team's resupply room, where they can change class and loadout instantly. Most resupply rooms contain cabinets, which fully restore health, restock weapon ammo, refill most item meters, and remove most negative status effects, though a similar effect can be achieved by class switching. Upon dying, a player waits to respawn in a respawn wave, which typically comes at ten- or five-second intervals, but do vary by map, team color and size, objective status, and server settings. After this wait, they appear at their team's furthest forward resupply room. Resupply rooms can be earned by capturing points or pushing Payload carts to checkpoints and can be lost if the opposing team makes such progress themselves.

Many maps make use of doors. Although their visuals suggest otherwise, doors are handled by the server as being either completely open or completely shut, alternating between the two instantly. Most doors are opened whenever a player stands near them. However, some doors will only open to players coming from a certain side or players on a certain team, most notably resupply room doors. Some doors remain locked until certain conditions are met, such as control points being captured or Payload cart checkpoints being reached.

The boundaries and surfaces of maps are not determined by visual elements, but invisible surfaces that determine where players and projectiles can go. All maps--even outdoor ones--have player ceilings and walls, though they may be invisible, and projectiles may even appear to go through them. Additionally, many surfaces and objects in the game that appear to take physical space are completely ignored for collision detection, with players and projectiles passing through them as if nonexistent; these surfaces can be used for hiding Stickybombs or spamming targets from cover.

Maps usually have pickups placed in various locations. Map-specific health and ammo pickups will remain in place until grabbed, respawning after a ten-second delay. The map health pickups restore 20.5%, 50%, or 100% health based on size (pill bottle, first aid tin, and ice cooler, respectively); similarly, the map ammo pickups restore 20.5%, 50%, or 100% ammo and 41, 100, or 200 metal based on size (small grey metal box, medium beige metal box, and large wood crate, respectively). When players die, they usually drop weapons that can be picked up for 50% ammo and 100 metal (unless the dropped item was an Engineer toolbox, which drops 100% ammo and 200 metal); destroyed buildings also leave behind metal debris, which can be picked up for ammo and metal. A Heavy who dies with a Sandvich, Dalokohs Bar, Fishcake, or Buffalo Steak Sandvich active will instead drop that, which can be picked up for 50 health points (75 for Scouts).

Several elements can be found in places where many players may go to if needing a health kit or ammo. A player who cannot find health kits or ammo may find an Engineer's Dispenser to get some, or if there is no Dispenser, go to spawn.

Server settings

Main articles: Servers, Server Browser
See also: SourceTV, Mods

Server settings can have a strong impact on gameplay in terms of performance and game balance. Players can select what kind of server on which they want to play using the Server Browser, filtering based on tags (which include game modes and changes to respawn times), player count, map, latency, and the like. Generally, servers closer to the player's location will have reduced latency, resulting in faster connection and more accurate hit detection. Game smoothness is also affected by the server's hardware and networking settings, especially at higher player counts or when running some mods.

Servers can run scripts and configs just as a player can, with commands from clients issued by rcon. For additional functionality, there are numerous server plugins to modify gameplay or provide administrative or stat assistance, the most common being SourceMod and HLStatsX. Instead of running plugins, servers can use logs to interact with third-party matchmaking programs, such as TF2 Lobbies, which let them see stats out-of-game.

There are a variety of server settings that can change gameplay without running plugins or external programs. These can include:

  • Respawn times: Respawn times can be changed to either be shorter or effectively removed entirely. These can cause fluctuations in map and class balance, though combat is more steadily provided.
  • Damage settings: Servers can disable random Critical hits, random damage spread, and random pellet spread with ConVars. This is most commonly done on competitive servers and those that frequently play arena maps.
  • Max players: While TF2 was originally designed for 24 players or fewer, servers can raise the limit to 32 at the cost of performance. This can cause an increase of spam that slows objective progress but ensures a greater amount of combat in the map.
  • Objective specifics: Map objectives can be specified from the server. For example, the CTF game mode can be played to a certain capture count, to a certain time limit, or both. Related options include disabling Crit boosts from First blood or Intelligence capture, changing the map time limit, and using a win difference mercy rule.
  • Pure: The sv_pure ConVar dictates what kinds of custom files are allowed on the server. When set to 0, clients can use any custom content they wish. When set to 1, clients are allowed to use any files on the server's whitelist. When set to 2, clients may not use any custom content besides those specifically allowed by Valve.
  • SourceTV: Servers can enable SourceTV to allow a large number of spectators to watch the game without risking interference. SourceTV acts like an observer player, taking up a server slot while not playing on either team. Unlike players, SourceTV broadcasts its spectator view from the server's IP address (using a different port).
  • Special modes: There are server modes that can be applied to any map regardless of game mode, including highlander and tournament modes. These are more commonly reserved for private events and competitions.

Other common rule areas that can vary by server include team size/balance rules, alltalk (cross-team) voice chat, and ping limits.

Configuration

There are a variety of ways to configure the Team Fortress 2 client. The choices players make in setting up TF2 can have impacts on game interaction, performance, and presentation. Most of these methods of customization are not available on console versions of the game, save main menu options.

Program setup

Example of launch options.
Main articles: Steam, Launch options

Some aspects of a player's machine, operating system, and Steam settings can affect TF2, and after a long history of updates, Team Fortress 2 has required an increasing amount of system resources to play at optimum frame rates. Additionally, some program features enabled by default may be undesirable for certain players, either due to performance issues or personal preference.

Steam, by default, enables both Steam Cloud synchronization and the Steam Community In-Game Overlay, which can be changed under Steam Settings. Within Steam's interface, players can also change launch options. As the name suggests, launch options are TF2 settings that are applied when the game is launched. Launch options can be accessed by opening the Properties of Team Fortress 2 in the Steam Library and clicking "Set Launch Options...". Launch options are separated by spaces and start with either a dash (if the command is not accessible through console commands) or a plus sign (if the command is a console command). Launch options can be used to achieve a variety of effects, including...

  • Smooth Alt+Tabbing: Players who wish to view other windows and programs while running TF2 can run it in windowed mode with no border. This can be reversed with the full-screen launch option (-full). Example (for 1440x900 resolution): -window -noborder -w 1440 -h 900
  • DirectX Level: Due to performance or personal preference, running TF2 in a low DirectX level may be ideal. Example (for DirectX 8.1): -dxlevel 81
  • Disabling Extraneous Features: Memory usage and performance drops can be minimized by disabling unused features. Example: -novid -nojoy -noipx -nocrashdialog

In addition to the Steam options, launch options can be specified for individual shortcuts to Team Fortress 2 by adding them to the file "C:\Program Files\Steam\Steam.exe" -applaunch 440 as a shortcut target. For example, this shortcut target would run TF2 full-screen with no intro video:

 "C:\Program Files\Steam\Steam.exe" -applaunch 440 -full -novid

Video card and sound card configuration tools can be used to override game settings. For example, some video card utilities can change mat_picmip to values outside the normally allowed bounds in Team Fortress 2, though this can be considered cheating.

Team Fortress 2 can be subject to operating system influences on mouse control. While this can be mitigated through launch options and registry edits, the easiest method to override this is by enabling Raw input (m_rawinput 1).

Customization

Default fov (top) and max fov (bottom) from same vantage point.
Main articles: Options, Scripting, Heads-up display

The most straightforward way for a player to customize their TF2 experience is the in-game options panels. In essence, the options panels are user-friendly ways to set ConVars, which can otherwise by set manually using the developer console. These panels are...

  • Keyboard: Allows for simple key binding (can be done in command console with bind "KEY" "COMMAND"). The advanced options allow for fast weapon switching (change slots without confirming with the attack key) and enabling developer console (an important option for anyone using console commands).
  • Mouse: Contains options for mouse and gamepad control. The "Raw input" option gives users more reliable mouse aiming by bypassing operating system mouse settings.
  • Audio: Has a variety of sound-related options. Closed captions do not work without custom files.
  • Video: Allows for some control of display settings, though some settings found in launch options and FPS configs are missing or disabled. The advanced video options panel has the field of view (fov) slider, which can be increased to grant the player wider vision in-game.
  • Voice: Has simple controls for in-game voice chat.
  • Multiplayer options: Contains a great variety of gameplay-related options (mostly in advanced options) and content download control.

These settings are stored as ConVars in config.cfg, found in the cfg folder (which is usually found in C:\Program Files\Steam\steamapps\STEAMLOGIN\team fortress 2\tf\). By default, config.cfg is saved to the Steam Cloud.

In addition to the menu panels, ConVars can be changed with more specificity using scripting. Scripting allows for more advanced and uniquely tailored controls, dynamic player settings, and more optimized performance (performance scripts are usually just called "configs"). Script files are located in the cfg folder (usually found in C:\Program Files\Steam\steamapps\common\team fortress 2\tf\). The file autoexec.cfg runs on game startup, and the class-named files (such as scout.cfg) each run when first spawning as the appropriate class. Most scripts are made using bind, alias, game commands, and/or ConVars; the wait command may be used to produce automated, chronologically sequenced functions, though a number of servers disable this with sv_allow_wait_command 0.

Many aspects of the TF2 interface can be customized by editing the Heads-up display, or "HUD". Most custom HUDs always work regardless of server settings, unless the HUD uses customized material files, which constitute custom content and are disabled by sv_pure servers (most HUDs only contain /resource/ and /scripts/ files, which are allowed in all pure settings).

Tools

Main articles: Help:Recording demos, Steam Workshop

There is a variety of first-party (some in-game and some not) and third-party tools to assist in playing, editing, and analyzing Team Fortress 2. These can include:

  • Demo Recording and Playback: Players can record demos of gameplay (record FILENAME in console) to watch or share later without using the resources necessary for live video capturing. Demos can be played with the console command playdemo FILENAME and captured to video using the startmovie command. PREC is a common, Valve-approved add-on to TF2 that automates demo recording.
  • TF2 Tool Mode: TF2 can be run under a "tool mode" with the launch option -tools. The tool mode allows access to the Commentary editor, Material editor, and perhaps most notably, the Particle editor.
  • Source SDK: The Source Engine Software Development Kit, or SDK, is a set of programs that come with all Source engine games and run through Steam, including the Model Viewer (commonly used for posing wiki images) and Hammer editor (used for making maps). The SDK can be accessed in the Tools subsection of the Steam Library and has its own wiki.
  • GCFScape: One can examine and extract the contents of TF2 using GCFScape, a third-party application used by most custom content editors. GCFScape can also be used to validate or defragment game files. In order to view and edit VTF files extracted using GCFScape, VTFEdit is commonly used.

These tools, in addition to modeling and sound editing software, can be used to edit a variety of TF2 gameplay elements, though their actual presence in-game is based on server settings (most notably with the sv_pure command and file whitelists).

User-made content can be submitted to Valve through the Steam Workshop. Content deemed worthy of inclusion becomes official game content, with the author credited and rewarded for their contribution.

See also

External links