3D World

Review: 3ds MAX 2017

- Price company

The upgraded Max should make life easier

£174 per month / £1,404 for one year / £2,668 for two years / £3,791 for three years

Every year when Autodesk releases its latest version, it faces a barrage of critical feedback. This has been the case for a number of years, mainly due to the lack of useful features and an apparent refusal to implement some of the most requested features over at Autodesk Uservoice.

I’ll stay out of that conversati­on and focus on reviewing the new features. According to Autodesk’s website there are 23 new features – though a quarter of these are enhanced versions of existing tools. The documentat­ion on these tools points towards the fact that the majority of new tools are there to make an artist’s life easier. That’s great, but the lack of new, groundbrea­king features is a little disappoint­ing. In every release, artists want to see a healthy mix of improvemen­ts to the existing offering and the addition of new features which are going to push the software forward. I think Autodesk lacks the balance in this release.

There are tools to make your life easier, such as a tool called the Scene Converter. It essentiall­y converts old Arch & Design, mental ray and standard items into physical materials, physical cameras and physical lights, that can be used in conjunctio­n with the new Autodesk Raytracer Renderer (ART). But I wonder how many scenes are going to need converting? I’m sure some users will find a use for it.

Autodesk has also developed an Asset Library tool which enables you to access all the models that you’ve either created or downloaded over the years. This is a brilliant idea and it will definitely make the process of populating scenes more streamline­d and headache free. As mentioned, it’s not going to blow anyone away, but it will make your life a little easier.

There are a number of tools that modellers will be grateful to see, including the ability to do pointto-point selection, local alignment The future of 3ds Max Since Autodesk purchased 3ds Max, it has gradually been developing and improving it. Despite having a team devoted to its developmen­t, people think Autodesk will phase Max out in favour of making Maya – the primary solution for visualisat­ion. That may be the case, but for now Autodesk says 3ds Max has a promising future and its positionin­g in the market warrants its existence. Autodesk transforma­tions, and pin the working pivot of an object. Every release in recent years has included a number of tools to remove the labourious nature of some modelling tasks; this release is no exception. Another plus is the new boolean system which has been completely overhauled. If you’ve ever used booleans you’ll know how often they’re unworkable as a modelling solution. Boolean operations are now part of a modifier, enabling users to stack operations and create extremely complex geometry simply and reliably.

For artists working at the rendering end of the pipeline you’ll notice that 3ds Max ships with ART. I’m a V-ray user, but it seems that the options for rendering natively in 3ds Max change with every release! However, ART provides users with a physically-based tool, ideal for visualisat­ion workflows.

Autodesk has created a solid release: Last year its tag line was ‘The Biggest Max Ever’. An accurate tag line this year would be, ‘Making your life a little easier’.

Autodesk has developed an Asset Library tool which enables you to access all your models

Text tool enhanced Enhanced UV mapping Enhanced Object tool Asset Library New boolean system Scene Converter Raytracer Renderer (ART)

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia