(Includes more detail on how the Text-to-3D system works) Read an introductory tutorial on using RaySupreme Read more about RaySupreme on the BrainDistrict website RaySupreme is available now for Windows, Mac OS X and Linux. Still, it’s a cute little application, and at $39.99, it isn’t an expensive one. Judging by the video, the render engine won’t be winning any prizes for speed, though and animation is confined to motion paths and camera animation. If you don’t want to use the Text-to-3D system, RaySupreme has a range of conventional 3D tools, including a complete node-based texture editor. Presumably, it’s like playing Scribblenauts, and the software will ignore words that it doesn’t recognise – but we can’t find any information on BrainDistrict’s website as to how many words that is. How well this works for anything that isn’t a generic interior scene is a matter of conjecture. Screenshots on the website also suggest you can type in commands like “move the table 40 cm forward and 60 cm left” to control the position and relative scale of objects in the scene. (Cutely, you can then type in things like “it is 1928 AD” to change the style of the models used.) The video above shows a user typing in commands like “a dining chair left of the table, facing the table”, which seems to bring in assets from a built-in library. German developer BrainDistrict has released RaySupreme: a new application that enables users to create simple 3D scenes by typing in descriptions in plain English.
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