Modding:Creating and Exporting Meshes in Blender: Difference between revisions
(Created page with " In this tutorial I will assume you are generally knowledgable about how to put meshes together, so this will focus on things specific to Baldur’s Gate 3 exporter. ==Setup== modder’s multitool First you need Blender 3.6 and to install Norbyte’s Blender installer. https://github.com/Norbyte/dos2de_collada_exporter Make sure you install it correctly- this video is quite out of date but should give you some example of how to install it. You should also install Padme...") |
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Revision as of 12:21, 30 December 2023
In this tutorial I will assume you are generally knowledgable about how to put meshes together, so this will focus on things specific to Baldur’s Gate 3 exporter.
Setup
modder’s multitool First you need Blender 3.6 and to install Norbyte’s Blender installer. https://github.com/Norbyte/dos2de_collada_exporter Make sure you install it correctly- this video is quite out of date but should give you some example of how to install it. You should also install Padme’s Addons, specifically ‘Create LODs’ https://www.nexusmods.com/baldursgate3/mods/346
Extracting a model to work with
Now open your (up to date I hope) modder’s multitool. Click ‘Search Index’. Filter by .GR2. Search something like HUM_F_ARM_ and browse the in game meshes available to regular size humanlike females. You do at least need to extract HUM_F_NKD_Body_A (or whatever you are basing your outfit on) to fit your new outfit around. When you have found a t-posing model to your liking. Click the extract file/open folder. You should find the mesh in .GR2 and .dae form on your computer. Use the .dae- the Blender importer likes .dae format a lot more than it likes .gr2. You generally cannot import a modded-in mesh without the plugin crashing Blender. Hopefully you save your own work often and can re-export it from there, and have obtained permission to edit all the modded items you want to import, so this shouldn’t be a problem.
Importing
Your armatures will import in at 90 degrees. This will cause it to export flat to the floor and follow a naked character around like a lazy dementor, so you need to fix it. Object > Apply> All Transforms, until the coordinates for its location all read 0, 0, 0. You may need to do the same thing on the mesh as well.
The mesh will import in with 1 or more LODS. These are level of detail meshes, intended to be viewed at a distance so they are lower poly. You only need the best quality one as we are making new LODs later, so delete anything that has LOD in the name.
If your mesh you imported has a skirt, it may have an undetailed boxy thing called a ‘Cloth Mesh’. This has to do with Physics (see below).
Combining Meshes
If you wish to combine two meshes for whatever reason, remember that each mesh will have its own name for the UV map and colour maps. You need to rename the UV maps and Colour maps to be the same before you combine them, or one will be absorbed into the other.
Vertex Paint
The game’s armour system works by vertex paint. It uses this, in combination with the .lsx code, to tell it what to hide and what to show. For example, an armour mesh may unload the torso as it will not be shown. The bottom half of a pant leg may not show when boots are equipped. You can use existing meshes as a reference for this. The HUM_F_NKD_Body_A is useful as reference here. For example if you set an upper arm to be hidden for some gloves, you may wish to fit it around these seams to ensure there is no gap in the body showing. You can turn on the vertex paint to look at it in non-Vertex Paint modes by touching the Blender attributes menu.
Generally outfit meshes are black in vertex paint, with some dark green on elements intended to disappear such as the pant legs. If you intend to use part of an underwear mesh on an outerwear outfit, make sure you paint it black in Vertex Paint or it will hide when it’s not supposed to.
Fixing meshes that import in wrong
See this video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NCDGhz3RSr8 Sometimes, this is generally because the verts were too close together and the importer made a hiccup. See this video.
Physics
Physics are set with red vertex paint. Hot pink vertex paint counterbalances the physics. You may need to delete the cloth mesh your mesh imported with as it can cause to export badly. Here is a tutorial about how to add physics to your mesh by ReallyLazyIcarus. https://www.nexusmods.com/baldursgate3/articles/311 Some people have had success pasting the code from in game meshes into their code, specifically clothbuffer values, which caused the physics to be less flappy. Which is worth a try if you have a lot of patience and experience with coding. If you learn anything new, add it here!
Lods and Load Order
Padme’s addons
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5TpdCBxYO1Q
Using Padme’s addon tool, click the button to generate LOD and you will have your nice set of LODs. You may need to edit if it’s a new mesh -LOD should be set by the addon -Lod Distance is the distance from which your mesh swaps to the next LOD. For this reason your high quality should probably be something like 9-15 metres, while your last LOD always needs to be set to 0. If you don’t particularly care about it performing well on bad computers, you can have no LOD and just set your high quality mesh to have a Lod distance of 0. -Export order. Generally all your LOD0 meshes go first, then your LOD1, LOD2, LOD3, assuming you have multiple LOD0 meshes. Look at imported game meshes for reference. If there is not a consistent export order, the mesh will refuse to export. If you get this wrong in the code some meshes may end up with the wrong material assigned to them, but no other consequences.
Exporting
Remember to set all of your mesh to the same material in Blender, or ideally delete all materials assigned to the mesh before exporting, or some parts of the outfit may not show up in the game. Default export settings are fine to use. Remember to save as .GR2 and use that in all your code, the game is very concerned with capitalisation. Your mesh will export x-mirrored. Meshes import in from the multitool x-mirrored, so they are the right way around now!
Testing in Game
It is recommended to test the mesh first by exporting it as a replacer for an existing mesh(even one from a mod you have unpacked) if you are new to modding, as there’s a lot of things that can cause an item to not show up in your code.
Hotloading
It is not only possible but very recommended to hotload meshes, it enables you to fix them in action. [Modding:Hotloading See here for how.]