Easily align your workplane to any world axis, the camera or the current selection, then snap to the grid or adjust global coordinates based on the workplane orientation. Model faster and more accurately with new interactive Workplane modes, dynamic guides and a completely redesigned Snap system. Directly texture, animate and render your sculpted mesh, or easily bake it to a low-poly mesh with displacement and normal maps. You can even organize your sculpt project in a hierarchical layer system and modify mask and strength options for each layer. Finer details can be added using stamps and stencils, and you can apply masks to limit the sculpting to specific regions. Advanced symmetry tools allow you to mirror a single stroke along multiple axes, and even radially. Transform any base mesh into virtual clay, shaping it with tools like Pull, Pinch, Smooth, Knife or Scrape. The greatest consideration should be how well a workstation meets your needs, allowing some margin for a cutback on rendering capability, keeping in mind the ready availability of Cinema 4d render farms for CPU and GPU rendering.Organic modeling is made easy with the fully-integrated Sculpting system in CINEMA 4D Studio Release 14 and BodyPaint 3D. That should cover the essential components of a decent to ideal workstation rig for Cinema 4d. A good budget range would be in between the Nvidia GeForce GTX 680 and a Quadro K4000.
While lower tier cards can still preview detailed scenes, a better card allows previews that are closer to the final render, and higher frame rates for playing back animation. Maxon recommends at least 4 GB worth of RAM, but 32GB for the average user, and 64GB for the power user.Ī good graphics card determines the quality of Cinema 4d’s OpenGL viewport, and the speed of third-party GPU renderers such as OTOY’s Octane renderer (keep in mind there are Cinema 4d render farms that provide support for GPU renderers as well). Dealing with multiple subdivisions, displacement and working with Cineware, is almost inevitable for the Cinema 4d user, but the specific nature of your work determines how much RAM you’d actually need. The more RAM you have, the more complex scenes your workstation will be capable of handling. Alex recommends an Intel i7 8700K, and Maxon recommends a 2 CPU machine with the highest possible base clock and number of cores (for rendering) within budget.
#CINEMA 4D SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS FREE#
Just like GarageFarm's Cinema 4d render farm, we are generous with starting credit, and going this route will free up your workstation for other projects, maximizing productivity, and saving you from the overhead costs of maintaining several machines. Besides, these days delegating projects to a render farm is, more often than not, a better way to go for projects that can’t wait. The i7 770K has a single core cinebench score of 197, topping the eight core Ryzen 7 1700X, for example. Working on complex projects under the best possible circumstances outweigh the benefits of slower feedback but more cores, mainly because most of Cinema 4d production makes use of only one core. The more cores you have, the sooner your renders complete, but as Alex from CGDirector explains, the quickest response time while working on a project is far more critical. If you’re a 3d user assembling a rig for the first time, the number of cores in a processing unit might seem like the determining factor for the investment. The base clock value indicates how many clock cycles or calculations a processing unit can complete in one second. Here are a few things to consider:Īny 3d program needs to have a CPU with a high base clock value. In truth, a rig that would be ideal for Cinema 4d would be a perfect rig for any other 3d application.
Cinema 4d is an established bigwig in the motion graphics and VFX industries today, and with its ever growing popularity it isn’t surprising for the ideal configuration of hardware for this program to be a frequent topic among aficionados and professionals alike.