In the age of AI-assisted coding, the sharpest Unity C# programmers are the ones who still write, debug, and understand code the old-fashioned way. By Darko Tomic.
Writing for Unity developers at any level, Darko Tomic makes the case that AI tools, while impressive, can erode the foundational skills that distinguish competent programmers from copy-paste operators.
His advice spans six areas: deliberately coding without AI assistance to build mental models, treating every Unity error message as a diagnostic tool rather than noise, making debugging the first resort rather than the last, adopting Git from the very start of a project, memorizing the Unity MonoBehaviour lifecycle execution order, and stepping away from the keyboard when stuck.
Some main ideas mentioned:
- Coding without AI for a few hours each week builds mental models that make you a better developer and a better prompter.
- Treating every Unity error message as a diagnostic story—rather than noise to outsource to an LLM—drastically reduces debugging time.
- Debugging is a core skill, not a fallback; use logs and stepping to verify assumptions before changing code.
- Start every project with Git from day one, learn it in the terminal first, and don’t rely on GUI clients as a crutch.
- Memorize the Unity MonoBehaviour execution order page to eliminate an entire category of initialization bugs.
- Step away from the keyboard when stuck—your brain continues solving problems in the background.
- The differentiator in 2026 is not output speed but the ability to understand, debug, and extend code that AI produced.
The underlying thesis is that AI accelerates output but not understanding, and that the developers who invest in fundamentals now will be the ones called upon when AI-generated code inevitably breaks in ways only human insight can resolve. Good read!
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