Voronoi Fracture and Shatter Lab Tests – Blender & Bullet Physics
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FIPu9_OGFgc&fs=1&rel=0]
Series of simple voronoi fracture and shatter tests created using Phymec Tools. Scenes were all setup quickly, simulated in real-time, and rendered overnight…
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Is it just me, or is it strange that most of the chunks seem to be of about
the same size? And there’s essentially nothing long/thin and jagged. I
dunno. It does look cool, though.
How far into the future do I have to look to see this successfully employed
into a game? Like an open-world/sandbox type?
This looks so realistic! I just don’t get how to do so:(
How to download bullet physics thing,
is there an way you could download this stuff?
I love the way it looks, even if using these particular parameters it does
look quite artificial.
Mind BLOWN!
yes
did you render it in 60 fps because in slow motion it doesn’t seem to lag ?
amazing!
Pretty cool, thats not how an egg shell would react tho.
TUTORIAL PLZ!
This is animated?
That is really cool
Someone should add soundFX to this video… so that I don’t have to keep
making them with my mouth! “ssshhBOOOMmm!”
The 3 glass panes with the bolt going through them looks unrealistic. The
middle pane would break into larger pieces, and the bolt would lose half
it’s momentum after breaking the first pane. (Unless this is some weak ass
glass, and that bolt is moving at 400mph.)
Is this for video games or just over all physics?
This is really cool but I agree with the people who say that those things,
especially those that are not chalk, should stay in fewer pieces.
Cool! but you must make particles dump!
How did you get the objects to spin like that? I understand how to set
everything up, but I don’t quite know how to give an object any velocity in
terms of rotation.
check my channel, i did some elementary work with fracture and dust….
comments will be welcome ….
8:43 “I came here like a wrecking baaaall!”
So beautifull :’D *cries*
the legend says it’s still rendering…
That’s one fragile rock!