IMHO there are three reasons to use OpenGL ES in a game:
- Avoid differences between mobile platforms by using an open standard;
- To have more control of the render process;
- To benefit from GPU parallel processing;
Drawing text is always a problem in game design, because you are drawing things, so you cannot have the look and feel of a common activity, with widgets and so on.
You can use a framework to generate Bitmap fonts from TrueType fonts and render them. All the frameworks I've seen operate the same way: generate the vertex and texture coordinates for the text in draw time. This is not the most efficient use of OpenGL.
The best way is to allocate remote buffers (vertex buffer objects - VBOs) for the vertices and textures early in code, avoiding the lazy memory transfer operations in draw time.
Keep in mind that game players don't like to read text, so you won't write a long dynamically generated text. For labels, you can use static textures, leaving dynamic text for time and score, and both are numeric with a few characters long.
So, my solution is simple:
- Create texture for common labels and warnings;
- Create texture for numbers 0-9, ":", "+", and "-". One texture for each character;
- Generate remote VBOs for all positions in the screen. I can render static or dynamic text in that positions, but the VBOs are static;
- Generate just one Texture VBO, as text is always rendered one way;
- In draw time, I render the static text;
- For dynamic text, I can peek at the position VBO, get the character texture and draw it, a character at a time.
Draw operations are fast, if you use remote static buffers.
I create an XML file with screen positions (based on screen's diagonal percentage) and textures (static and characters), and then I load this XML before rendering.
To get a high FPS rate, you should avoid generating VBOs at draw time.