安裝 Steam
登入
|
語言
簡體中文
日本語(日文)
한국어(韓文)
ไทย(泰文)
Български(保加利亞文)
Čeština(捷克文)
Dansk(丹麥文)
Deutsch(德文)
English(英文)
Español - España(西班牙文 - 西班牙)
Español - Latinoamérica(西班牙文 - 拉丁美洲)
Ελληνικά(希臘文)
Français(法文)
Italiano(義大利文)
Bahasa Indonesia(印尼語)
Magyar(匈牙利文)
Nederlands(荷蘭文)
Norsk(挪威文)
Polski(波蘭文)
Português(葡萄牙文 - 葡萄牙)
Português - Brasil(葡萄牙文 - 巴西)
Română(羅馬尼亞文)
Русский(俄文)
Suomi(芬蘭文)
Svenska(瑞典文)
Türkçe(土耳其文)
tiếng Việt(越南文)
Українська(烏克蘭文)
回報翻譯問題
Try mimicking what valve did.
I don't know how to import the textures of the models into blender to see what they did but I'll ask you in anouther discussion so the users of this group whith similar questions can have an easier time looking it up. Thanks.
Like you said, it's actually a model that is slightly larger than the default heavy arms. It is rigged to several bones to follow the heavy arms exactly: http://i.imgur.com/RMAHAxh.png
These extra arms have their own texture which contains the actual skin texture as well as the tattoo texture in the alpha channel. The reason the tattoo texture is in the alpha channel rather than directly on the arm is so that it can be paintable (you just set up your texture like you normally would for paint): http://imgur.com/a/DHxzp
As for getting the shading correctly, mimic what they have in the .vmt settings:
Obviously the in-game vmt editor isn't as complex, but try to match the above as close as you can in terms of phong, lightwarps, and paint.
Good luck!