This course contains a little bit of everything with modeling, UVing, texturing and dynamics in Maya, as well as compositing multilayered EXR's in Photoshop.
Hi,
I made this wall whilst playing with bump mapping. I'm quite pleased with it, but I'd like to give the bricks a bit more depth. I've tried increasing the bump map depth but I have reached the limit before it begins to look bad. Any other ways of making the bricks extrude in more detail?
that link you posted asked me to register at the site, so not sure what game effect you're trying to emulate.
But the best way to achieve actual depth is to actually have that depth in your scene, ie. modeling the bricks or using a displacement map that will literally carve the bricks out of the mesh.
In games, obviously, this isn't applicable, due to polycount limitations. The newer, higher-end game engines these days use parallax displacement maps to "simulate" depth.
Again, this is a game engine specific feature, and not something that can be accurately portrayed in Maya without a plugin (unless Maya 7 has it somewhere that I'm not aware of).
What that is actually doing is using a grayscale hieght map to actually nudge the individual pixels of the texture around to overlap or stretch them based on the camera view and thus giving the illusion of real-time depth.
Thanks for the comments dae. You've really helped me to improve.
But seriously, much appreciated mtmckinley & magicsy. I've attached the image I was linking to.
The paralax displacement you described sounds a lot like bump mapping - what's the difference?
Also, is paralax displacement like a dx9 feature (for example) or is it a unique feature programmed into specific game engines?
Moon idea sounds great. I'll model some more detail and try displacement maps etc to see how it goes. Ideally though I want to use technology that will work in games too, but I have a fair bit to go before I can start doing parallax displacements in a game engine
the main difference between bump map and parallax displacement map is that the parallax will actually nudge pixels of a texture to occlude itself (or *overlap* itself) to create the illusion of depth.
If you have a texture of a brick wall, with all the grout between each brick and apply that texture to a plane with a bump map, you will never see a brick's SIMULATED extrusion actually cover the grout that should be behind it. Parallax displacement will, greatly improving the illusion of depth.
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