

They have a demo version which is water stamped, download it and get a feel of what Octane can do. Although you must buy one extra standalone license for each computer you want to network render on.īoth standalone and plugin are available on their website, link on the end of this article. But if you’ve read part two of this article series, you are aware that any network render node ONLY needs the standalone. If you’re buying Octane, you must buy both the standalone and the plugin. This plugin acts as the link between your program and Octane Standalone Renderer. The second one is the plugin for your 3D software, for example, 3ds Max. This is the same no matter what 3D software you are working with.

The first is the Standalone application, which is the render engine itself. Please note that this is not a tutorial, but if you’re completely fresh to FStorm it might be a good help to get started. I actually wanted to write this guide for FStorm, but it felt like a waste of time considering Daniel Reuterswärd already did such a great job on it – Unbiased GPU Rendering with FStorm. The MED as Ronen described it (Minimum Effective Dosage). 3, I thought I could just go through the very basic knowledge you need to get started with Octane Render.

Part 1 : Unbiased GPU Rendering – What’s the Big Deal?.If you missed the previous two parts, be sure to that you do : So, I guess that most of you who aren’t already into unbiased GPU rendering have gotten a pretty good idea of what it’s really is all about. I’ve explored my GPU, and what it can offer me, a lot in the past 2-3 weeks.

There is a lot of insight to be found in the 4 articles published on this topic here. This one is about getting started with Octane Render, and completes the mini-journey that started with Daniel Reuterswärd‘s counterpart article about the same thing with FStorm. Third part of the Unbiased GPU Rendering series by Johannes Lindqvist is here.
