I am using my blender objects in unity. Unity is culling the backfaces.
So I wanted to generate the backfaces as seperate polys from blender itself. I can do it by duplicating the mesh itself but is there any way to do it through a modifier?
The solidify modifier will generate a second surface parallel to the original.
If you want the new surface as a separate object, you can disable 'Fill Rim', then when you apply the modifier the mesh will be two disconnected parts. In edit mode Press L to select linked vertices which you can separate by selection P to move them to a second object.
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I have thoses two meshes:
In my game, I put the hat on the hair at runtime:
As you can see, as expected, the hair is visible outise the hat part.
How can I achieve this in Unity (what kind of mask shader should I use?):
I've tryed to make a depth mask but it hides every meshes in my scene. I just want to hide the hair, not others meshes.
And what if I have two player having the same case? Would player mask hide player 2 hair? How can I avoid that?
What I would do:
write a C# code that gets the pivot position (bottom part of the hat) and its up vector every frame.
build a plane with these values. The up vector would be the normal vector of the plane and a plane can be defined by a point and a normal vector.
I would pass the equation of the plane to the shader (via Material.SetFloat or Material.SetVector) and evaluate if the world positions of the hair vertices are in the correct or in the wrong side of the plane.
I'm trying to create an interactive world map like in Europa Universalis IV or Crusader Kings II using Unity3D. These two games create the map using an existing image (like this https://i.imgur.com/y2gtX2N.png). I have never done something like this before and I'm really confused on which is the best approach/technique to use.
What I need is an idea on how to show the map and be able to select every single province taken from the image.
My method would require you to provide each region as an individual sprite.
1) Add all sprites to the scene and form the world map (SpriteRenderer or UI.Image).
2) Make a Component that handles interaction, and add it to each World Map Part GameObject.
Implement the following interfaces to it, and specify the logic accordingly:
3) Add the Polygon Collider 2D Component to each World Map Part GameObject.
4) Add the Physics Raycaster 2D Component to your Camera.
If you choose to use UI.Image (which I do not recommend), you can skip steps 3 and 4, and instead set alphaHitTestMinimumThreshold to 1 on your World Map Part Component's Awake().
I have a 3d building model in my Unity project. It has many children like doors, walls etc. The problem is, all of the children points to same position in the Unity world (24.97, -2.08, 19.35). Their transforms show this position. And this position is far away from their actual one. How can i fix this?
I tried freeing all children from parent but this didn't change anything.
I want them to show their real position, which appears with move tool when we click upon them.
Here is the image link
It seems that this is simply their pivot point exported "wrongly" from the 3D editor your model was made with.
This won't change until you export it correctly from a 3D editor (Blender, Maya, etc).
Unity is not made for 3D mesh modeling and therefore in Unity itself you can't change the pivot points.
There is a very simple fix
Add a new empty GameObject
In the Inspector go to the Transform component, click on the context menu and hit Reset (you also simply set it to position 0,0,0 rotation 0,0,0 and scale 1,1,1) assuming the pivot should be at 0,0,0
Now drag and drop all objects into the empty GameObject
=> You have now one parent object with correct pivot.
By wrapping it in a parent object the childrens pivots don't matter anymore. You can simply do all translation, rotation and scaling on the parent object with the correct pivot and don't have to care about that "wrong" position at all.
How to get/generate a proper mesh collider in Unity using a model exported from Blender (.obj/.fbx)?
This is my second day using Blender and I'm hitting a roadblock. I've tried fiddling with the Rigid Body Collisions, i.e., setting "Shape" to Convex Hull and "Source" to Final/Deformed (Blender docs specify that these two settings capture modifiers), I've tried "Generate Colliders" inside Unity and the mesh collider always comes out as above. A box.
How to assign mesh collider to the exact mesh? I started with a circle and used a boolean modifier to create the cutout. Desire is to have the mesh collider around the mesh exactly, meaning no collider on the cutout. How to do this?
Make sure you have a Mesh Collider component on your object with the correct mesh set. Watch out for the convex parameter for flat objects, as it can sometimes fail and give you a box collider instead.
Edit:
I just noticed you said you were using a RigidBody, which means you need to have Convex set. A solution to this is to make a second mesh in Blender with a third dimension to it, then set the flat one on the Mesh Filter and the one with thickness to the Mesh Collider.
In importing a .obj or a .fbx, select the asset. make sure you have generate colliders selected.
Here I have imported an FBX into unity, but there are no colliders.
Sellect the asset, and turn on generate colliders if you want a collider around the mesh:
Alrighty,
I have a dumpster model I have exported from Blender as an FBX. The transform, rotation and scales have all been applied in Blender. when importing into Unity and then adding to the scene, the model is elevated and rotated at an odd angle to the transform as per the image.
The model has an armature for animating the lids an I have applied the location, rotation and scale on it as well.
Any one else come across this or know of a fix?Thanks
Blender image
Incorrect dumpster transform and location image
The problem is that Blender uses the right-handed coordinate system which means the Z-axis is pointing upwards.
Unity uses the left-handed coordinate system which means the Y-axis is pointing upwards.
To fix this, set the X-axis rotation of the model to be -90. Press Ctrl+A and apply rotation. The X-axis rotation will look like it is now 0 after that. Set it to 90 again and export it to Unity.
This 3 minutes video should also help you do this if you are still confused.
If you still have problems, check your animation. Don't apply it to your model and see if it's the problem.
Also as a side note, you can use blender files (.blend) directly with unity. So every time you modify them inside your project folder they change in unity as well.
The simplest way to solve this would be as follows:
Create a dummy game object (D)
Transform/offset the position of D to make sure your object's position align with the dummy parent
Put your game object as the child of the dummy game object D
You can then apply transform on D, rather than your own game object directly.