The demo doesn’t show any more complex effects like particles or fluid simulation – neither of which is yet supported in the Cinema 4D edition – but U-Render says that it will continue to add features. ![]() The new teaser suggests that the Maya edition is finally moving closer to a release, and shows a fairly complex scene running on mid-to-high-end consumer GPU: a previous-gen GeForce RTX 2080.Ĭhanges to lights and materials – including displacement settings – are displayed interactively in the viewport, and character animations scrub through at a workable rate. The software has been available for Cinema 4D since 2018, with U-Render announcing a Maya edition as far back as 2020, at which point it was due in beta by the end of the year. ![]() Genuine real-time rendering for both viewport previews and final-quality outputĭesigned more like a game engine than a conventional offline renderer, U-Render promises genuine real-time rendering, for both viewport previews and final-quality output. The demo, recorded on a system with a Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080 GPU, shows lights and materials being edited in real time on a scene with ambient occlusion and screen space global illumination enabled. U-Render Visual Technology has released a sneak peek at U-Render for Maya, the long-awaited Maya edition of its ‘really real-time’ renderer.
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