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The Blender Game Engine was a free and open-source 3D production suite used for making real-time interactive content. It was previously embedded within Blender , but support for it was dropped in 2019, with the release of Blender 2.8.
The Blender Game Engine was a built-in real-time graphics and logic engine with features such as collision detection, a dynamics engine, and programmable logic. It also allowed the creation of stand-alone, real-time applications ranging from architectural visualization to video games.
The Blender Foundation is a Dutch nonprofit organization responsible for the development of Blender, an open-source 3D content-creation program. [1]The foundation has distributed the animated films Elephants Dream (2006), Big Buck Bunny (2008), Sintel (2010), Tears of Steel (2012), [2] [3] Caminandes: Llama Drama (2013), Caminandes: Gran Dillama (2013), Cosmos Laundromat (2015), Glass Half ...
Blender: 2024-08-20 v 4.2.1 [1] [2] Blender Foundation: ... Engine Volume Rendering for clouds Interactive Rendering Isolating light contribution Light Lister IES
Blender, for example, had no option to create a cryptomatte image before version 2.80. [6] With version 2.80, only the "Cycles" path-tracing render engine supported creating a cryptomatte whereas "Eevee", the newly added real-time render engine, did not.
LithTech is a game engine developed by Monolith Productions and comparable with the Quake and Unreal engines. Monolith and a number of other video game developers have used LithTech as the basis for their first-person shooter games.
It features some of the latest engine technology such as direct fuel injection, sintered camshaft lobes, thin-walled engine block, variable valve timing and lift for intake and exhaust valves, downstream oxygen sensors, exhaust manifold integrated into the cylinder head, exhaust gas recirculation and cooling, distributors coil-on-plug ignition ...
V-8 engines were produced by the Daimler Company in displacements of 2.5 L (153 cu in) (1959-1968) and 4.5 L (275 cu in) (1959-1968). Designed for Daimler by Edward Turner, they were initially used in the SP250 sports car and the Majestic Major saloon respectively; ultimately, the 2.5 L was mostly used in the Daimler 2.5 V8 (later named V8-250) saloon made with Jaguar Mark 2 unit bodies from ...