Why TyFlow is awesome!

Описание к видео Why TyFlow is awesome!

In this video I'll go over the top 5 reasons why TyFlow is awesome! If you've used 3ds Max then you might be familiar with Particle Flow, which is 3ds Max's native particle engine, but it's single threaded, slow, and hasn't been updated in forever. Thanks to Tyson Ibele, TyFlow was developed for the 3ds Max community as a completely new particle engine that features super fast multi-threaded GPU acceleration. So now you can create 3ds Max particle simulations with an insane amount of geometry and collisions. This makes a huge difference as an FX artist when you’re building and developing a shot, especially when it requires a ton of iterations to perfect the final look of your animation. With tyFlow, you can easily simulate a wide range of technical effects, such as building demolitions with advanced fracturing options, fluid & particle effects like rain, snow, mud, slime, dust, and even grain simulations. It provides easy ways to create soft & rigid bodies, cloth simulations, crowd simulations, and so many more types of effects.. You can also use TyFlow particles to drive Chaos Phoenix, for other smoke, fire, and explosion type simulations. Using the TyParticleSkin modifier you can also create some really cool deformation effects, imagine metal crunching on a car for instance, but this can be used to drive any type of mesh deformation effect. TyFlow also has particle binding, mapping operators, VDB’s for fancy growth effects, and includes some awesome modifiers like tyBoolean, tyConform, and tySlice to name just a few. TyFlow simulations can even be meshed out with TyMesher for fast blob meshing - for effects like water condensation on a glass for instance. Finally you can even export your tyflow simulations into other 3D software like Unreal Engine or Nvidia Omniverse for real time rendering.

You can download TyFlow here:
https://pro.tyflow.com/

For more awesome TyFlow tutorial channels I highly recommended:
‪@RedefineFX‬
‪@fabienescudero‬
‪@andvfx‬
‪@fxmaniac2839‬
‪@simulation_lab‬

For more 3ds Max, TyFlow, and Houdini tutorial content, visit:
https://edstudios.ca/

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