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unreal-mcp-ue4

v2026.5.12-3

Published

UE4.27-first MCP server for controlling the Unreal Editor through Unreal Python Remote Execution.

Downloads

940

Readme

unreal-mcp-ue4

UE4.27.2-focused MCP server for Unreal Engine using Unreal Python Remote Execution

npm version MCP Registry GitHub release

unreal-mcp-ue4 started from the core idea and early workflow shape of runreal/unreal-mcp, but it has since been heavily refactored for Unreal Engine 4.27.2 and expanded with many new tools, UE4-specific compatibility layers, documentation, and smoke coverage. At this point, the original inspiration remains, but the public surface and day-to-day behavior are substantially different and UE4-first.

This port and the follow-up tool, documentation, and smoke-test work were developed with assistance from OpenAI Codex.

This project is still under active development, so bugs, rough edges, and UE4.27-specific limitations may still surface.

Published package: unreal-mcp-ue4
Registry name: io.github.conaman/unreal-mcp-ue4

Overview

  • No custom Unreal C++ plugin from this repository is required.
  • The server talks to the editor through Unreal's built-in Python Remote Execution path.
  • The tool surface is organized into granular tools and higher-level tool namespaces.
  • UE5-only editor scripting features are not reintroduced; UE4.27-safe operations work normally, while unreliable graph or binding flows are either excluded from the MCP surface or return a clear message instead of silently failing.

Origin

  • Original inspiration and starting point: runreal/unreal-mcp
  • The current codebase has gone through extensive UE4.27-focused refactoring, architecture changes, and tool expansion.
  • In practice, the shared idea is still visible, but the implementation, scope, and supported workflows now reflect a separate UE4-first project.
  • Unreal Python API reference: Unreal Engine Python API 4.27

Safety

  • This is not an official Epic Games project.
  • Any connected MCP client can inspect and modify your open Unreal Editor session.
  • Use a disposable test project first, especially when trying asset or world-generation tools.

Requirements

  • Unreal Engine 4.27.2
  • Node.js 18+
  • npm
  • An MCP client such as Codex, Claude Code, Claude Desktop, Cursor, or GitHub Copilot in a supported IDE

MCP Client Setup

This is the most important setup step: your MCP client must know how to launch unreal-mcp-ue4.

1. Install the server

Recommended global install:

npm install -g unreal-mcp-ue4

After the global install, use the published unreal-mcp-ue4 binary in your client configuration.

One-off invocation with npx:

npx unreal-mcp-ue4

Local source checkout:

git clone https://github.com/conaman/unreal-mcp-ue4.git
cd unreal-mcp-ue4
npm install
npm run build

Successful build output should create dist/bin.js, dist/index.js, and dist/editor/tools.js. Use the dist/bin.js path in the local source checkout examples below.

2. Register the server in your client

Use the global examples when you installed with npm install -g unreal-mcp-ue4. Use the local source checkout examples when you are developing from a cloned repository.

Claude

Global npm install:

claude mcp add --scope user unreal-mcp-ue4 -- unreal-mcp-ue4

Local source checkout:

claude mcp add --scope user unreal-mcp-ue4 -- node /absolute/path/to/unreal-mcp-ue4/dist/bin.js

Codex

Global npm install:

codex mcp add unreal-ue4 -- unreal-mcp-ue4

Local source checkout:

codex mcp add unreal-ue4 -- node /absolute/path/to/unreal-mcp-ue4/dist/bin.js

GitHub Copilot

Create or update .vscode/mcp.json.

Global npm install:

{
  "servers": {
    "unreal-ue4": {
      "command": "unreal-mcp-ue4",
      "args": []
    }
  }
}

Local source checkout:

{
  "servers": {
    "unreal-ue4": {
      "command": "node",
      "args": [
        "/absolute/path/to/unreal-mcp-ue4/dist/bin.js"
      ]
    }
  }
}

Then start the server from the MCP config UI and verify that unreal-ue4 appears in the tools picker.

Official Copilot docs:

3. Enable Unreal Editor remote execution

This repository does not ship its own Unreal plugin. Instead, it depends on built-in editor features that must be enabled in your UE4.27.2 project.

In Unreal Editor:

  1. Open the target UE4.27.2 project.
  2. Go to Edit -> Plugins.
  3. Enable Python Editor Script Plugin.
  4. Enable Editor Scripting Utilities.
  5. Restart the editor if prompted.
  6. Go to Edit -> Project Settings -> Python.
  7. Enable Enable Remote Execution.
  8. Restart the editor again if needed.

Notes:

  • UMG tooling works with editor modules that already ship with Unreal Editor. There is no extra UMG plugin from this repository to install.
  • Keep the target Unreal project open while using the MCP server or running tests.
  • If you change plugin or Python settings, restart the editor before testing again.

Usage

Interface model

  • Prefer the manage_* namespace tools as the main MCP surface.
  • Namespace tools now expose action-specific input schemas through MCP, so clients can discover the expected params keys per action instead of relying only on trial and error.
  • Treat manage_editor.project_info as the canonical project summary entry point.
  • Treat manage_editor.map_info and manage_level.world_outliner as the canonical map and level read entry points.
  • Use direct tools only for a small set of low-level primitives such as Unreal session path discovery and actor create or update or delete flows.
  • Use manage_editor.run_python as an escape hatch for debugging, rapid prototyping, and UE4.27 API gaps that are not yet wrapped as stable tools.

Recommended first-run flow

  1. Open your UE4.27.2 project and wait for the editor to finish loading.
  2. Make sure the required plugins and Enable Remote Execution are enabled.
  3. Install the MCP server globally with npm install -g unreal-mcp-ue4, or build your local checkout with npm run build.
  4. Start your MCP client or open a new session in the client that already references this server.
  5. Run a small read-only command first.

Useful first commands:

  • unreal-mcp-ue4 --version to print the MCP server package version without starting stdio transport.
  • manage_editor with action: "project_info"
  • manage_editor with action: "map_info"
  • manage_level with action: "world_outliner"
  • manage_tools with action: "list_namespaces"

Useful first natural-language requests:

  • Get project info from the unreal-ue4 server.
  • List the actors in the current level.
  • Spawn a StaticMeshActor named TestCube at 0,0,100.

What the server can do

  • Read project, map, asset, and actor information from the open editor.
  • Spawn, inspect, move, and delete actors in the current level.
  • Search assets and inspect references or metadata.
  • Create common UE4 data assets such as DataAsset and StringTable assets.
  • Create and edit Blueprint assets where UE4.27 Python exposes the necessary editor APIs.
  • Create and edit Widget Blueprint trees with UE4.27-safe UMG helpers.
  • Run grouped tool namespaces that dispatch through action and params.

Testing

No-Unreal smoke test

Use this when you want to verify MCP startup, tool discovery, namespace action schemas, and action-specific parameter validation without launching Unreal Editor.

npm run test:no-unreal

Quick smoke test

The smoke test builds the server, launches its own local MCP server process, connects to the already running Unreal Editor, and runs a deterministic validation flow. You do not need to start a separate MCP server manually before this test.

npm run test:e2e

This checks:

  • MCP server startup
  • tool discovery
  • project info, map info, and world outliner reads
  • source-control provider and state reads
  • direct-tool actor create, update, and delete
  • namespace-layer actor spawn, search, transform, inspect, and delete
  • tool-namespace discovery and namespace-layer dispatch for source control and actor control

Asset-inclusive smoke test

npm run test:e2e -- --with-assets

This adds:

  • Blueprint creation
  • Blueprint component editing
  • Blueprint mesh assignment
  • Blueprint compilation
  • DataAsset creation
  • DataAsset metadata readback
  • StringTable creation
  • Texture import and metadata readback
  • Widget Blueprint creation
  • TextBlock and Button insertion
  • advanced CanvasPanel and child-widget add, move, and remove flows
  • cleanup of temporary assets under /Game/MCP/Tests

Useful options:

  • npm run test:e2e -- --with-assets --keep-assets keeps the generated test assets so you can inspect them in the Content Browser after the run.
  • npm run test:e2e -- --skip-namespace skips the namespace-dispatch portion of the smoke run.
  • npm run test:e2e -- --verbose prints MCP server stderr during the run.
  • npm run test:e2e -- --help prints the runner options without rebuilding the server.

Windows test commands

Open PowerShell in the repository folder:

cd C:\dev\unreal-mcp-ue4
npm install
npm run test:no-unreal
npm run test:e2e
npm run test:e2e -- --with-assets

What success looks like

  • The console prints [PASS] for every test step.
  • Actor tests visibly create and then remove temporary actors in the editor through both the direct-tool and namespace surfaces.
  • The asset-inclusive test creates temporary Blueprint, DataAsset, StringTable, Texture, and Widget Blueprint assets under /Game/MCP/Tests and then removes them before exit unless --keep-assets is used.

Recommended test workflow

  1. Start with npm run test:no-unreal.
  2. If that passes, run npm run test:e2e.
  3. If the editor-backed smoke test passes, run npm run test:e2e -- --with-assets.
  4. After all smoke tests pass, try the server once from your real MCP client.
  5. Use a separate Unreal test project before pointing the server at production content.

Publishing to npm

The package is published to npm as a public package.

The project version format is unified everywhere as the semver-compatible date form YYYY.M.D-N. For example, 2026.5.8-1 follows this format.

Recommended maintainer flow:

  1. Update the project version.
  2. Run the publish preflight:
npm run publish:check
  1. If you have a running UE4.27 editor test environment available, also run:
npm run test:e2e -- --with-assets --skip-build
  1. Publish:
npm publish --tag latest

Notes:

  • prepack runs npm run build, so the published tarball always uses a fresh dist.
  • npm run publish:check verifies typecheck, rebuilds the package, and runs npm pack --dry-run so you can inspect the exact tarball contents before publishing.
  • Because the unified date version uses a semver prerelease suffix, publish with an explicit dist-tag such as latest.

Troubleshooting

Remote node is not available

  • Make sure Unreal Editor is fully open before running the MCP client or smoke test.
  • Verify that Python Editor Script Plugin is enabled.
  • Verify that Editor Scripting Utilities is enabled.
  • Verify that Enable Remote Execution is enabled in project settings.
  • Restart Unreal Editor after changing any of the above.

Connection or discovery problems on Windows

  • Allow UnrealEditor.exe and node.exe through Windows Defender Firewall.
  • The server uses UDP multicast discovery on 239.0.0.1:6766 and opens the command channel on port 6776.
  • By default, the command bind address is the first non-internal IPv4 address found on the machine. Override it with UNREAL_MCP_BIND_ADDRESS or UNREAL_MCP_COMMAND_ADDRESS if Unreal cannot discover or connect to the MCP process.
  • If your client config uses JSON, escape backslashes or switch to forward slashes.

Client starts but cannot find unreal-mcp-ue4 or node

  • For the recommended global install, make sure the npm global binary directory is on the MCP client's PATH.
  • If your client cannot inherit that PATH, use an absolute path to the global unreal-mcp-ue4 executable.
  • If you are using the source-development config, use an absolute path to node or node.exe instead of relying on PATH.

Some Blueprint graph or UMG binding commands are unavailable

  • Widget Blueprint creation and common widget-tree editing work in this fork; the main UMG gaps are delegate binding helpers and runtime-dependent viewport flows.
  • Blueprint asset creation, component editing, compilation, and high-level asset summaries work; graph inspection, graph pin wiring, and variable or function metadata helpers are intentionally excluded because stock UE4.27 Python does not expose the required Blueprint metadata reliably.
  • Capability areas that are not reliable enough to keep in the MCP surface are listed under Excluded Capability Areas in the tool section.

Notes and Limitations

  • World-building and structure-generation tools use UE4.27-friendly preset builders based on engine basic-shape assets.
  • Common UMG widget-tree editing works with native PanelWidget parents, but delegate binding helpers remain unavailable in stock UE4.27 Python.
  • UMG absolute positioning targets CanvasPanel slots in UE4.27. Use manage_widget.ensure_canvas_root when a Widget Blueprint has a non-Canvas root but needs CanvasPanel-style positioning.
  • Directly reparenting the current root widget and editing named-slot content are not currently handled.
  • Blueprint asset and component editing work, but Blueprint graph inspection, pin wiring, and variable or function metadata inspection are excluded in the stock UE4.27 Python environment.
  • The tool surface includes both granular tools and action-based tool namespaces so different MCP clients can work at different abstraction levels.

The tool list below is generated from the TypeScript tool catalog during build.

Available Tools

Notes call out important requirements or UE4.27 limitations when they matter. Empty notes mean there are no additional caveats beyond normal editor setup.

The recommended public surface is the manage_* namespace layer. Prefer manage_editor.project_info, manage_editor.map_info, and manage_level.world_outliner as canonical read entry points, and treat the small direct-tool set as low-level primitives for path discovery and actor CRUD.

Editor Session Info

Core Direct Tools

Core Tool Namespaces

World & Environment Tool Namespaces

Content & Authoring Tool Namespaces

Gameplay & Systems Tool Namespaces

Excluded Capability Areas

These capability areas are intentionally not exposed through the MCP surface in this UE4.27 port because they fail reliably in the current Python environment and only add prompt or context overhead until a native bridge exists.

| Capability Area | Effect on MCP Surface | Why It Is Excluded | |-----------------|-----------------------|---------------------| | Blueprint event-graph event insertion | Related event-node and input-action helpers are excluded from the MCP surface. | The current UE4.27 Python environment does not expose reliable event graph access or K2 event reference setup. | | Blueprint graph inspection and node search | Graph-analysis, graph-inspection, and node-search helpers are excluded from the MCP surface. | The current UE4.27 Python environment does not expose Blueprint graph arrays such as UbergraphPages or FunctionGraphs reliably enough for deterministic inspection. | | Low-level Blueprint graph node creation | Generic graph-node helpers and related self or component reference insertion helpers are excluded from the MCP surface. | The current UE4.27 Python environment does not expose stable low-level graph node creation or member-reference wiring. | | Blueprint function-call node authoring | Function-node helpers that depend on editor graph member-reference setup are excluded from the MCP surface. | The current UE4.27 Python environment does not expose reliable function-call node reference setup. | | Blueprint variable and function metadata inspection | Variable-detail and function-detail helpers are excluded from the MCP surface. | The current UE4.27 Python environment does not expose NewVariables or FunctionGraphs reliably enough for deterministic inspection. | | Blueprint variable authoring | Variable-creation helpers are excluded from the MCP surface. | BPVariableDescription and EdGraphPinType are not exposed in the current UE4.27 Python environment. | | UMG delegate-binding authoring | Widget event-binding and text-binding helpers are excluded from the MCP surface. | DelegateEditorBinding is not exposed in the current UE4.27 Python environment. |

License

Licensed under the MIT License.