When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Unity (game engine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unity_(game_engine)

    This included new tools such as Timeline, which allowed developers to drag-and-drop animations into games, and Cinemachine, a smart camera system within games. [30] Unity 2017.2 also integrated Autodesk's 3DS Max and Maya tools into the Unity engine for a streamlined asset sharing in-game iteration process. [31]

  3. Isometric video game graphics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isometric_video_game_graphics

    For instance, compared to a purely top-down game, they add a third dimension, opening up new avenues for aiming and platforming. [1] Secondly, compared to a first- or third-person video game, they allow you to more easily field and control a large number of units, such as a full party of characters in a computer role-playing game , or an army ...

  4. Unity (user interface) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unity_(user_interface)

    Unity Desktop, pre-Ubuntu Unity redesign, if installed in Ubuntu 22.04 LTS and below. This screenshot is specifically running Unity 7.5.1, on Ubuntu 20.04. The Unity user interface consists of several components: [10] Top menu bar: a multipurpose top bar, saving space, and containing: the menu bar of the active application

  5. Unity Technologies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unity_Technologies

    Unity Software Inc. (doing business as Unity Technologies) [3] is an American video game software development company based in San Francisco.It was founded in Denmark in 2004 as Over the Edge Entertainment and changed its name in 2007.

  6. 2.5D - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2.5D

    2.5D (basic pronunciation two-and-a-half dimensional) perspective refers to gameplay or movement in a video game or virtual reality environment that is restricted to a two-dimensional (2D) plane with little to no access to a third dimension in a space that otherwise appears to be three-dimensional and is often simulated and rendered in a 3D digital environment.

  7. Tracking shot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tracking_shot

    A variant of the tracking shot is the onride video, also known as a phantom ride, where the camera films during a ride on a train, an amusement ride (especially a roller coaster) or another vehicle. Such videos may be used to document the route, and the camera may be fixed to the vehicle or held by a person in the vehicle. [8]

  8. Movie camera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Movie_camera

    Camera bodies, and sometimes lenses, were increasingly made in plastic rather than the metals of the earlier types. As the costs of mass production came down, so did the price and these cameras became very popular. This type of format and camera was more quickly superseded for amateurs by the advent of digital video cameras in the 2000s.

  9. Tilt (camera) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tilt_(camera)

    The Dutch angle, also known as Dutch tilt, is a head tilt to one side, is a type of camera shot where the camera is set at an angle on its roll axis so that the shot is composed with vertical lines at an angle to the side of the frame, or so that the horizon line of the shot is not parallel with the bottom of the camera frame.