This returns true if this object is the one that represents the player on the local machine.
In multiplayer games, there are multiple instances of the Player object. The client needs to know which one is for "themselves" so that only that player processes input and potentially has a camera attached. The IsLocalPlayer function will return true only for the player instance that belongs to the player on the local machine, so it can be used to filter out input for non-local players.
This example shows processing input for only the local player.
public class Player : NetworkBehaviour {
int moveX = 0; int moveY = 0; void Update () { if (!IsLocalPlayer ()) { return; } // input handling for local player only int oldMoveX = moveX; int oldMoveY = moveY; moveX = 0; moveY = 0; if (Input.GetKey(KeyCode.LeftArrow)) { moveX -= 1; } if (Input.GetKey(KeyCode.RightArrow)) { moveX += 1; } if (Input.GetKey(KeyCode.UpArrow)) { moveY += 1; } if (Input.GetKey(KeyCode.DownArrow)) { moveY -= 1; } if (moveX != oldMoveX || moveY != oldMoveY) { SendCommand("Move", moveX, moveY); } } }
See also UClient.GetLocalPlayer().