Environment Production with Unity & Megascans

Farrukh Rahman discussed the way he created a high-quality environment with Unity and Megascans and mentioned some useful Unity features and free assets.

Farrukh Rahman discussed the way he created a high-quality environment with Unity and Megascans and mentioned some useful Unity features and free assets.

Introduction

First of all, I would like to thank 80.lv for this opportunity to share some details about this project.

My name is Farrukh Abdur Rahman, I am a self-taught 3D artist from Lahore, Pakistan. I have been working for over 5 years now with different clients as a freelancer. My area of work includes creating 3D environments, character designs along with a focus on learning other aspects of game development like working in Unity. I am using it for almost all of my newer projects.

As I learned more about 3D art production, I started building 3D environments in which I wanted to present my own ideas and this also opened a bigger opportunity to work on a variety of projects.

Project Goals

This forest environment was designed to try to make a fast and efficient environment in a small amount of time. Another goal was to learn new features of Unity such as advanced lighting, shading and most importantly Megascans integration. The main restriction was to set a time frame of only 3-4 days to create a portion of a detailed real-time ready to use environment.

Real-Time Unity Editor Viewport

Setting Up a Scene in Unity

The project was made in Unity using the HDRP preset. Setting up the environment is quite easy. I started with a clean empty scene using the HDRP default settings and build upon it. It includes support for better lighting and shaders.

To figure out how big the environment was going to be I placed a default Unity standard asset 3D character and compared how big the surrounding area will be. Placing the character helps to keep size scale useful.

Another good approach is to collect some good references for a forest and similar places. This will give a better idea of how trees, foliage, and other details exist in real-world. The colors and lighting can be also studied from here.

Here is a reference guide that I used:

Next step, I would make a list of main elements that are going to be needed. I bring in most of the 3D assets in the new empty level and place them on the side. This way I know about the 3D models that I will be using. Also, many of the 3D assets are reused in different ways using scale and rotation properties.

I create a model pool outside of the playing area. All are linked as prefabs so changes are reflected across the entire level if needed.

The image below is a view of starting with a simple plane and then building upon it.

Using Megascans was very helpful in creating a detailed and realistic result. They offer some nice collection of free assets so anyone can give it a try and see the quality they offer.

Textures can go up to 8K if needed. However, here I used mostly around 2k. Here are some 3D assets I used:

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Quixel helps not only with models but materials, too, and there’s a huge collection of great-looking materials available.

The new Quixel Megascans Mixer app is very useful if custom materials need to be created. I would recommend it to anyone looking to easily create high-quality materials.

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Ready-Made Rocks

Most of the rocks are from Megascans. They come at five different levels of LOD. I have used 3 different types of rocks.

The models used here are optimized and already have associated textures. The 3D meshes which are further away from the camera view use a low poly LOD as compared to the meshes which are closer and show much more details.

Ready-Made Vegetation

The trees are from Unity Asset Store, as there is already a great collection of trees available there. For learning purposes, I looked at Unity’s new Book of the Dead project to learn tree setup. They have some of the best trees which are highly optimized and make use of custom vertex shaders which allow animation of branches. All trees are with 4 level LODs which again benefit the performance.

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Grass

With the help of scattering tools like Unity’s Polybrush, grass can be scattered really fast and easily. This can also be applied to trees and rocks. The grass shader is based on the new HD RenderPipeline which allows advanced features like sub scattering for nicer visuals.

Here is a quick demo of using Polybrush scatter feature:

Overview of a single grass base cloned two times with different scale rotation:

Helpful Unity Features

Some of the main features I used were Post Processing Stack, Cinemachine, Volumetric Lighting, and Environment fog. With the help of these I was able to hit the right color balance and atmosphere I was looking to achieve.

Cinemachine was used for creating different camera views. I use it in every project now to get real-time animated Unity game scene shots. It allows to set up different cameras and produce a nice walkthrough.

Volumetric lighting helps in creating light shafts:

 Post Processing Stack:

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Lighting

In my case, the lighting I used is all real-time and produces results instantly. As I wanted to test different light conditions it was more suitable here. Otherwise, light can be also baked.

Vertex Animation Shader

The movement of trees, plants, and grass are controlled by a custom vertex shader which is now available in Unity. The vertex shader allows animation of certain parts with control, otherwise, another option would be to animate them manually and that can take more time to create.

Here you can find more useful information about vertex animation shaders and plenty of examples of how to implement different effects.

Advice for Learners

Some of the best learning resources are available on Unity’s Youtube Channel and Unity Asset Store. Recently released projects like FPS sample give a fairly good idea of level creation. Furthermore, for creating high-quality 3D assets, I would recommend studying projects like Book of the Dead I’ve mentioned before and Megascans website.

Once again, here is the list of resources I would recommend for anyone looking to start building environments and game levels:

Afterward

Big thanks to Unity and Megascans for their great content creation applications. Also thanks to 80.lv for sharing great content daily.

More environments and Unity demo levels are available on my Artstation page. If you have any questions, please, free feel to let me know in the comments and I would be happy to answer or find me on Twitter.

Landscape Auto Material by VEA Games is a flexible auto-painting material for Unreal Engine 4 Landscape component. When you are drawing the topology of your landscape, proper material layers are drawn automatically!

Check the full feature list

Contact VEA Games

Farrukh Abdur Rahman, 3D Artist

Interview conducted by Kirill Tokarev

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Comments 1

  • Farrukh

    Thank you @Fcardoso

    The volumetric light is available in the latest 2018.3 beta. In the visual environment setting, there is a new option to select Volumetric light fog. The screen I shared is from 2018.2 during that time I was using a script to enable it :)

    0

    Farrukh

    ·5 years ago·

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