I'm a gamedev. Realistically, if you have no programming skill and no art skill, I would not recommend anyone to make a 3d game in the unreal engine. Likely anyone attempting this as a first step will just give up. Start much smaller instead. Stick to 2d. Get the game maker studio. For art, 3 possibilities: stick to shapes (lookup geometry dash for inspiration), paint over pixel art from 16bit era games or use an ai art generator. Keep it simple, do a 'chose your adventure', visual novel type of thing or a platformer. Yes it's going to suck probably but eventually, if you stick with it, you'll learn the skills and can go bigger.
The inability to make art seems like a bigger hurdle than programming, funnily enough. It’s easier for an artist to become a programmer than a programmer to become an artist.
I'm a gamedev. Realistically, if you have no programming skill and no art skill, I would not recommend anyone to make a 3d game in the unreal engine. Likely anyone attempting this as a first step will just give up. Start much smaller instead. Stick to 2d. Get the game maker studio. For art, 3 possibilities: stick to shapes (lookup geometry dash for inspiration), paint over pixel art from 16bit era games or use an ai art generator. Keep it simple, do a 'chose your adventure', visual novel type of thing or a platformer. Yes it's going to suck probably but eventually, if you stick with it, you'll learn the skills and can go bigger.
The inability to make art seems like a bigger hurdle than programming, funnily enough. It’s easier for an artist to become a programmer than a programmer to become an artist.
Even if everyone could do both, the time that art demands vs the willingness of people to put it in results in a lot more demand for art than supply.