Hugo Locurcio 2a962929f3 Update demo files for Godot 4.2.1 (#1013) 9 月之前
..
screenshots f7e3ceb31e Add camera controls to the Physical Light and Camera units demo (#931) 1 年之前
README.md d4496aada8 Add a 3D physical light and camera units demo 1 年之前
icon.webp d4496aada8 Add a 3D physical light and camera units demo 1 年之前
icon.webp.import d4496aada8 Add a 3D physical light and camera units demo 1 年之前
living_room.blend d4496aada8 Add a 3D physical light and camera units demo 1 年之前
living_room.glb d4496aada8 Add a 3D physical light and camera units demo 1 年之前
living_room.glb.import 2a962929f3 Update demo files for Godot 4.2.1 (#1013) 9 月之前
options.gd f7e3ceb31e Add camera controls to the Physical Light and Camera units demo (#931) 1 年之前
project.godot 2a962929f3 Update demo files for Godot 4.2.1 (#1013) 9 月之前
test.tscn f7e3ceb31e Add camera controls to the Physical Light and Camera units demo (#931) 1 年之前

README.md

Physical Light and Camera Units

This demo showcases a physical light and camera units setup. This allows you to use real world units for lights (lumen, lux, Kelvin) and cameras (shutter speed, aperture, ISO sensitivity).

By default, Godot uses arbitrary units for many physical properties that apply to light like color, energy, camera field of view, and exposure. These properties use arbitrary units, because using accurate physical units comes with a few tradeoffs that aren't worth it for many games. As Godot favors ease of use out of the box, physical light units are disabled by default.

If you aim for photorealism in your project, using real world units as a basis can help make things easier to adjust. References for real world materials, lights and scene brightness are wildly available on websites such as Physically Based.

Language: GDScript

Renderer: Forward+

Screenshots

Screenshot