I've been loving your tutorials for a while [under other youtube usernames]. Have had Fusion 360 as a main work tool for 4 yrs (architectural lettering & address nos & corporate & sports awards) & have slowly been growing accustomed to Blender since 2.79. However, Blender's been proving almost too complicated for my aging brain, esp when I only use it every few weeks. For some reason this UE walkthrough of yours [plus 2 others you released on UE] have made this s/w look a little more accessible. Here's my goal: build assets in fusion 360 or blender [mostly super simple extrusions of 2D vector drawings dressed up in metallic finishes/textures], then drop them into the appropriate environments for a) walkthroughs like this one (as video) and b) something with selectable camera angles (& possible configurator controls for the product assets & environment finishes that the consumer can tweak) like the viewport one finds in Sketchfab (with their numbered-camera-angles-with-text approach). Question: Should I consider working UE into my workflow or just keep going on Fusion360 & Blender? Or some 3rd/4th option?
Hi Justin, I take it this is UE5? I got up to the part to create a level sequencer and it is not highlighted as an option. i.e. Windows/Cinematics/Sequencer. Any idea what I might be doing wrong?
Once you create this sequence, but you don't finish your animation, how do you play back this next time you start UE5? I have done this a couple of times of creating an animation walkthrough using sequencer and when I save and go back in, it hasn't seemed to save. I can see all the keyframse in there and I want to continue adding to it however nothing moves, though while I was creating this animation it was working every time I pressed play at the time.
This is no walkthrough, this is just basic animation of two cameras in sequencer. I thought you would show us how to track the camera while walking in frist person view through the scene. Misleading title.
Hardly - this is a common description of what this kind of animation is - it's a video that walks you through a scene with a moving camera, or multiple cameras. The fact that you were expecting something different does not make the title misleading, since it is an accurate description