enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Blender Game Engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blender_Game_Engine

    Blender Game Engine was developed in 2000 with the goal of creating a marketable commercial product to create games and other interactive content, in an artist-friendly way. Key code in the physics library (SUMO) did not become open-source when the rest of Blender did, which prevented the game engine from functioning until version 2.37a.

  3. Rendering (computer graphics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rendering_(computer_graphics)

    Offline rendering can use a slower and higher-quality renderer. Interactive applications such as games must primarily use real-time rendering, although they may incorporate pre-rendered content. Rendering can produce images of scenes or objects defined using coordinates in 3D space, seen from a particular viewpoint.

  4. List of game engines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_game_engines

    Game content, including graphics, animation, sound, and physics, is authored in the 3D modeling and animation suite Blender [1] Blender Game Engine: C, C++: 2000 Python: Yes 2D, 3D Windows, Linux, macOS, Solaris: Yo Frankie!, Sintel The Game, ColorCube: GPL-2.0-or-later: 2D/3D game engine packaged in a 3D modelar with integrated Bullet physics ...

  5. Back-face culling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Back-face_culling

    If the user has specified that front-facing polygons have a clockwise winding, but the polygon projected on the screen has a counter-clockwise winding then it has been rotated to face away from the camera and will not be drawn. The process makes rendering objects quicker and more efficient by reducing the number of polygons for the program to ...

  6. Scanline rendering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scanline_rendering

    The Dreamcast provided a mode for rasterizing one row of tiles at a time for direct raster scanout, saving the need for a complete framebuffer, somewhat in the spirit of hardware scanline rendering. Some software rasterizers use 'span buffering' (or 'coverage buffering'), in which a list of sorted, clipped spans are stored in scanline buckets.

  7. Pre-rendering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pre-rendering

    Pre-rendered graphics are used primarily as cutscenes in modern video games, where they are also known as full motion video.The use of pre-rendered 3D computer graphics for video sequences date back to two arcade laserdisc video games introduced in late 1983: Interstellar, [2] [3] introduced by Funai at the AM Show in September, [4] and Star Rider, [5] introduced by Williams Electronics at the ...

  8. Blender (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blender_(software)

    An architectural render showing different rendering styles in Blender, including a photorealistic style using Cycles Lunar Crater Radio Telescope conceptual design with the Moon and Earth rendered in Blender. Blender includes three render engines since version 2.80: EEVEE, Workbench and Cycles. Cycles is a path tracing render engine.

  9. 3D rendering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3D_rendering

    A photorealistic 3D render of 6 computer fans using radiosity rendering, DOF and procedural materials. Rendering is the final process of creating the actual 2D image or animation from the prepared scene. This can be compared to taking a photo or filming the scene after the setup is finished in real life. [1]