Up to date

This page is up to date for Godot 4.3. If you still find outdated information, please open an issue.

Building from source

Godot prides itself on being very easy to build, by C++ projects' standards. Godot uses the SCons build system, and after the initial setup compiling the engine for your current platform should be as easy as running:

scons

But you will probably need to use at least some of the available options to configure the build to match your specific needs, be it a custom engine fork, a lightweight build stripped of extra modules, or an executable targeting engine development.

The articles below should help you navigate configuration options available, as well as prerequisites required to compile Godot exactly the way you need.

Basics of building Godot

Let's start with basics, and learn how to get Godot's source code, and then which options to use to compile it regardless of your target platform.

Building for target platforms

Below you can find instructions for compiling the engine for your specific target platform. Note that Godot supports cross-compilation, which means you can compile it for a target platform that doesn't match your current platform (say, target Linux while being on Windows). The guides will try their best to cover all possible situations.

Other compilation targets and options

Some additional universal compilation options require further setup. Namely, while Godot does have C#/.NET support as a part of its main codebase, it does not get compiled by default to reduce the executable size for users who don't need C# for their projects.

Articles below explain how to configure the buildsystem for cases like this, and also cover some optimization techniques.