

New in ZBrushCoreMini 2021: add entire body parts to sculpt with a few clicks with VDM It doesn’t open files from ZBrush itself. ZBrushCoreMini can open project files generated in ZBrushCore, though it isn’t possible to edit them: only to rotate the model. Sculpts start from one of two standard base meshes – you can’t import custom models – and can be exported in OBJ format, with the software automatically decimating the mesh for 3D printing.


Mesh resolution is capped at 750,000 polygons. Users get a highly simplified subset of features from ZBrush and ZBrushCore: 12 key sculpting brushes – up from eight in the original release – and eight materials. It includes Sculptris Pro, ZBrush’s new dynamic tessellation system, so it provides a genuinely clay-like sculpting experience, without the need to worry about subdividing a mesh manually, Launched last year, and targeted at students and 3D printing enthusiasts, ZBrushCoreMini is an entry-level non-commercial edition of ZBrush, slotting in below ZBrushCore, the commercial cut-down edition. Other changes include a new real-time ambient occlusion system, intended to display the fine surface detail on a sculpt more clearly, and the option to render a turntable animation of a model.Ī highly streamlined entry-level edition of ZBrush’s sculpting toolset The update adds support for ZBrush’s Vector Displacement Mesh (VDM) system, making it possible to add complex 3D features – including entire body parts – to a model in a few clicks. Pixologic has released ZBrushCoreMini 2021, the latest version of the free cut-down edition of ZBrush, which provides “new artists of all ages” with an introduction to the popular digital sculpting software.
