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Willem-Paul van Overbruggen for Blender: Chimpanzee head, based on an orangutan from the movie Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back: 500 faces GNU GPL 2+ (inherited from Blender as a whole) Mascot for Blender [2] Crytek Sponza: 2010 Frank Meinl at Crytek: The colonnaded atrium of the Sponza Palace in Dubrovnik [3] 262,267 triangles 184,330 vertices [3]
This page provides a list of 3D rendering software, the dedicated engines used for rendering computer-generated imagery. This is not the same as 3D modeling software , which involves the creation of 3D models, for which the software listed below can produce realistically rendered visualisations.
The Blender Game Engine was a built-in real-time graphics and logic engine with features such as collision detection, a dynamics engine, and programmable logic. It also allowed the creation of stand-alone, real-time applications ranging from architectural visualization to video games.
Rendering is usually limited by available computing power and memory bandwidth, and so specialized hardware has been developed to speed it up ("accelerate" it), particularly for real-time rendering. Hardware features such as a framebuffer for raster graphics are required to display the output of rendering smoothly in real time.
Electric Image Animation System (EIAS3D) is a 3D animation and rendering package available on both OS X and Windows. Mostly known for its rendering quality and rendering speed it does not include a built-in modeler. The popular film Pirates of the Caribbean [4] and the television series Lost [5] used the software.
The primary goal is to achieve an as high as possible degree of photorealism at an acceptable minimum rendering speed (usually 24 frames per second, as that is the minimum the human eye needs to see to successfully create the illusion of movement). In fact, exploitations can be applied in the way the eye 'perceives' the world, and as a result ...
Microkernel pure-OpenCL "Path" render engine, supporting any number of GPUs and OpenCL-enabled CPUs concurrently. Interactive viewport rendering, including real-time material and object manipulation. Material node support. Light groups, allowing the user to change the intensity and color of lamps during the rendering process. [10]
Maxwell Render is an unbiased 3D render engine, developed by Next Limit Technologies in Madrid, Spain. This stand-alone software is used in the film, animation, and VFX industry, as well as in architectural and product design visualization.