Quote
Originally posted by Weepul 884:
**Bryce is not a great ship-making program by any means, but it is not as underpowered as many people would say. Like has already been said, it's a challenge, but with determination and a good artistic sense, it can put out some decent stuff.
The main limitation of Bryce is that it doesn't have any real object editors - you have to work with primitives. The closest things is has to modelling abilities are boolean operations and metaballs, if you know what those are. If not, I or someone else on these boards could explain them to you.
Examples:
http://www.2xtreme.n.../tankership.jpg
http://www.2xtreme.n...cemodelling.jpg
http://www.2xtreme.n...enixfighter.jpg
The bottom line: it's not great for shipmaking, but it can be used for that with some work. It's just a bit of an uphill battle the whole way.
**
You left out the Terrain Editor. That'd be my first choice for making hulls, if I wasn't trying to slap Ray Dream 5.5 into some kind of functionality.
I keep bringing up Bryce as a first application because not only does it do almost everything (the modelling is worse than most. The skies and materials are --far-- ahead of most), but it is really cheap, really easy to use, and so durn comfortable and well-designed during use I still sigh in relief when I'm finished in Ray Dream, Amorphium, Amapi, Poser or what have you and import the end result into Brye to render.
It all depends on what you see yourself doing down the road. If you see yourself going into design school don't buy anything; wait for them to show you Maya then go jump on the academic discount. Same thing if you are hungering for a job at Pixar. If your thing is modelling, and you have dreams of making every ship used in the fifth Star Wars movie, then go grab a decent mid-range modeller; Strata, Cinema4D, Amapi (forget Carrara or Mechanisto -- you want NURBS at the least).
But for putting a foot in the water, the only thing that beats Bryce is trotting yourself downtown and getting into a class.
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"I know the stranger's name."
Turandot