Any time you rely solely on a simulation, you have to give up a little of the art direction – and in this case it just wasn’t giving us the result we wanted. The original idea was to create a set of rigid bodies that would react to the impact of a dynamic cricket ball – but we weren’t pleased with the outcome. Once we were happy with our sim, we baked it as an Alembic animation, allowing us to optimise our scene for faster rendering and play the sim back frame by frame. We need all edges of the goal net to stay in place, with only the area where the ball hits it to react. The benefit to this method was being able to define a weight map to control the impact and simulation of the netting more precisely. The next best option, and not used often enough – soft body dynamics – a way to create soft deformations on the surface of rigid bodies. However, as we got in to it it became apparent the cloth sim was not going to give us the results we wanted. Here we show how we achieved realistic dynamic simulations for a project with Cinema4D.įor this project we have two simulations A football striking the back of the net, and a cricket ball hitting the stumps and sending the bails flying.Ī lot of the time a setup you may think will work for one scene, often won’t work for another, so it’s important to breakdown exactly what you want the viewer to see and analyse the most efficient method for achieving the effect.įor the goal the original idea was to use cloth simulation – after all, the netting material behaves like cloth.
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