FBX support and MMD (pmx) support.
Normals, Albedo, Metallic, and Roughness through Arnold 5 Materials for Maya FBX.
Maya FBX Stingray PBS support.
Importing FBX static meshes work.
Importing FBX animations is a work in progress.
Supports FBX 4 bone influence animations.
Supports FBX blend shapes.
MMDs do not have an associated animation import yet.
Sponsored by IMVU Inc.
Network peers get_var/put_var
File get_var/store_var
GDScript/Mono/VisualScript bytes2var/var2bytes
Add MultiplayerAPI.allow_object_decoding member which deprecates PacketPeer.allow_object_decoding.
Break ABI compatibaility (API compatibility for GDNative).
Enum reference resolving will now search in the @GlobalScope if no class is specified and the enum cannot be resolved in the current class.
Added support for constant references in EditorHelp, e.g.: [constant KEY_ENTER] or [constant Control.FOCUS_CLICK]. It supports enum constants (the enum name must not be included).
GLES2 is not designed to be a drop-in replacement for the GLES3 backend,
so the fallback mode has to be used knowingly. It *can* make sense for
simple projects which make sure to handle the differences between both
rendering backends, but most users should stick to one supported backend.
By making it opt-in, we can now use this parameter to define whether to
export ETC textures to Android and iOS when using GLES3 + Fallback.
When using GLES3 without Fallback on Android, set the proper min GLES
version in the AndroidManifest.
Also made the option boolean and renamed it for clarity and to avoid
conflict with the previous String option (which would always evaluate as
"true" otherwise).
Fixes#26569.
Referencing #26466 , added possible use of property:component syntax for functions like interpolate_property, follow_property,etc.. in the class description.
Elaborate the difference between AnimationPlayer::advance and
AnimationPlayer::seek, specifically how intermediary events are handled for
each.
From the docs it is unclear that AnimationPlayer::advance is more of a
'fast-forward', playing each event (including function calls) between the two
points.