Vertex Painting in Lightwave: Difference between revisions
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''-Epifire 8/15/2017'' |
Revision as of 05:42, 15 August 2017
Here we'll discuss from start to finish, a Vertex Color Material for a model converted from Dark Radiant brushwork. Software you'll be using are Dark Radiant and Lightwave Modeler. How you procure a copy of Lightwave is entirely up to you; I happen to be using Lightwave Modeler 11.5 for this tutorial. It's worth noting that Lightwave saves it's model data into the proprietary binary file type LWO. LWO is one of two primary formats supported to run in the Doom3 engine (the other being ASE). This painting method can be done in either format but LWO is by far a superior type as it usually only amounts to mere kbs of data for multiple files.
This tutorial already assumes you know how to create levels and manage brushwork in Dark Radiant. After covering this tutorial you should cleanly be able to add in material blending to your levels, with no prior modeling experience. See the bottom of this page for basic hotkeys to use for Modeler.
Step 1: Prep and Export Brushwork
Here I already have a prepped small space done up in DR. It's important that you texture and scale the surface properties to your liking. When we export this data in the OBJ script, this will be used as your UV data in Lightwave. When ready to export in DR go Scripts>ExportOBJ and be sure to center objects.
Step 2: Importing and Painting in Lightwave
Now it's time to head to Lightwave and open your OBJ file you've exported. First thing you'll want to do is press F5 to bring up the Surface Editor panel. Two things you'll want to do is check smoothing on and find a good value (I use 60 degrees) and then press rename in the top right corner to specify the material name you want to embed in the saved LWO. Here I use vertex_blend_test for my example material name and it must be devoid of typos to match the name we'll declare in the MTR later.
Next we're going to paint black and white vertex colors to define material blending. To find the painting window you'll have to go to the Map tab and find Vertex Paint under Color.
>> Once the paint window loads, hit Edit and Create Vertex Color Map from this drop down >>
Here's an example of how your mesh should look when painted. Be sure you use solid white and black to paint with. The exception being grays where you want longer blend transitions. Once complete save and exit the paint window.
Step 3: Final Model and Material
Finally we just need to triangulate the polygons (since TDM can't render straight quads) and then save your new mesh to your desired output folder. To Triangulate the mesh simply go to the Multiply Tab and press Triple. You can now save the file to it's output directory. Note: LWO is Lightwave's native format and will save a working model for TDM by default.
A short rundown here on the material composition. This is a material I put together from stock assets so you can plug this right in (or modify it) to your heart's content!
vertex_blend_test { surftype15 description "grass" { blend bumpmap map textures/darkmod/nature/foliage/leaves_small_local VertexColor //This is white coverage } { blend diffusemap map textures/darkmod/nature/foliage/leaves_small VertexColor //This is white coverage } { blend bumpmap map textures/darkmod/nature/dirt/dry_earth_stones_local inverseVertexColor //This is black paint in coverage } { blend diffusemap map textures/darkmod/nature/dirt/dry_earth_stones inverseVertexColor //This is black paint in coverage } }
Save that into an MTR and make sure that name matches with the one you chose in the Surface Editor. If all goes well you should be able to pull of some more natural looking blends like this.
Ending Tips
Lastly I'd suggest to anybody doing floors or terrain, to save and reuse their original brushwork/patches textured with tdm_nodrawsolid_grass (or a collision type appropriate). This ensures that AI will traverse it correctly and footstep collision sounds wont be faulty.
Use textures that blend well together. Some textures just don't look too good side by side, so finding the right combination is key. Also creating a secondary distress/grunge texture from the original image has fantastic benefits of the two materials sharing similar details. This aids the blending and doesn't present as hard of a visual gradient where the blend occurs.
Use noshadows in your MTR definition when appropriate. Any time you know the model in question will never need to cast shadows, add this option. Since most scenarios require us to pad and, "insulate" or models with brushes, those solids will block lights for us. Anything you can do to chip away at the tris considered for shadow casters will help performance.
Hotkeys for Lightwave Modeler.
-S (save current model to file)
-Alt+LeftClick (rotate Camera)
-Alt+Ctrl+LeftClick (zoom Camera)
-Alt+Shift+LeftClick (pan Camera)
-Epifire 8/15/2017