Esoteric Spine 3.9 Enterprise Edition Download (crack included)
Spine is an animation tool that focuses specifically on 2D animation for games. Spine aims to have an efficient, streamlined workflow, both for creating animations using the editor and for making use of those animations in games using the Spine Runtimes.Animation in Spine is done by attaching images to bones, then animating the bones. This is called skeletal or cutout animation and has numerous benefits over traditional, frame-by-frame animation:
Smaller size Traditional animation requires an image for each frame of animation. Spine animations store only the bone data, which is very small, allowing you to pack your game full of unique animations.
Art requirements Spine animations require much fewer art assets, freeing up time and money better spent on the game.
Smoothness Spine animations use interpolation so animation is always as smooth as the frame rate. Animations can be played in slow motion with no loss in quality.
Attachments Images attached to bones can be swapped to outfit a character with different items and effects. Animations can be reused for characters that look different, saving countless hours.
Mixing Animations can be blended together. For example, a character could play a shoot animation while also playing a walk, run or swim animation. Changing from one animation to another can be smoothly crossfaded.
Procedural animation Bones can be manipulated through code, allowing for effects like shooting toward the mouse position, looking toward nearby enemies, or leaning forward when running up hill.
The dopesheet is at the heart of animating. It provides a detailed view of all the timelines that make up an animation and allows fine adjustments to be made to the animation's timing.
Free-Form Deformation (FFD) allows you to move individual mesh vertices to deform the image. FFD allows meshes to stretch, squash, bend and bounce in ways that aren't possible using rectangular images.
Weights (often called "skinning") allow individual vertices in a mesh to be attached to different bones. When the bones move, the vertices move with them and the mesh is deformed automatically. Posing a character with images that can bend becomes as easy as just positioning the bones.
Define paths using composite Bézier splines, then constrain bones to follow them. Paths make complex movement easy and enable advanced rigging by controlling a large number of bones in an intuitive way.
Spine can pack images into a texture atlas or spritesheets, which results in more efficient rendering in your games. Spine's texture packer has many features such as white space stripping, rotation, automatic scaling and more.
A bounding box is a polygon that is attached to a bone. Like images, the polygon is manipulated as the bone moves. This can be used for hit detection and physics integration.
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