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V-Ray is a biased computer-generated imagery rendering software application developed by Bulgarian software company Chaos. V-Ray is a commercial plug-in for third-party 3D computer graphics software applications and is used for visualizations and computer graphics in industries such as media, entertainment, film and video game production ...
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.
An example of two kinds of shadings: Flat shading on the left and Phong shading on the right. Phong shading is an improvement on Gouraud shading, and was one of the first computer shading models developed after the basic flat shader, greatly enhancing the appearance of curved surfaces in renders.
It can be integrated with 3ds Max, Blender, SketchUp, and Silo (generally any software that can export files in obj and 3ds formats). Kerkythea is a standalone renderer, using physically accurate materials and lighting. KernelCAD is a large component aimed to present CAD as a GUI element for programming engineers. Includes interface to Open ...
Cryptomatte is a piece of open-source software created by Jonah Friedman and Andy Jones at Psyop.It is also used synonymously for the specific style of image created by the software or other software working alike.
An image rendered using Mental Ray which demonstrates global illumination, photon maps, depth of field, ambient occlusion, glossy reflections, soft shadows and bloom. The primary feature of Mental Ray is the achievement of high performance through parallelism on both multiprocessor machines and across render farms.
Chaos Corona is a computer-generated imagery 3D rendering software developed by Chaos Czech, a subsidiary of Chaos.It was created by OndÅ™ej Karlík as a student project in 2009 and was developed by a Prague-based company Render Legion under the name Corona Renderer.
Originally, POV-Ray was distributed under its own POV-Ray License; namely, the POV-Ray 3.6 Distribution License [17] and the POV-Ray 3.6 Source License, [18] which permitted free distribution of the program source code and binaries, while restricting commercial distribution and the creation of derivative works other than fully functional ...