Jack Carver is cursing the day he ever came to this island. A week ago Valerie, a brash newspaper reporter, offered him an incredible sum of cash to sail her to this unspoiled paradise; but shortly after docking he was greeted by artillery fire from a mysterious militia group swarming over the island. With his boat destroyed, his money gone, and Valerie suddenly missing, Jack now finds himself facing an army of mercenaries amidst the wilds of the island with nothing but a gun and his wits to help him survive. And the further he pushes into the lush jungle canopy, the stranger things become...
Takaro CryImporter 1.2.
Takaro CryImporter script for 3ds max 6 and above
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Version 1.1
Copyright (C) 2006 Takaro Pty Ltd
Imports geometry and animation from Crytek CGF, CGA, and CAF files into 3ds max 6 or above.
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LICENCE
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This software is provided 'as-is', without any express or implied warranty. In no event will the
author be held liable for any damages arising from the use of this software.
Permission is granted to anyone to use this software for any non-profit purpose, including non-
profit commercial applications, and to alter it and redistribute it, subject to the following
restrictions:
1. Explicit permission from the authors must be obtained if this software is to be redistributed as
part of a 'for-profit' application.
2. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must not claim that you wrote the
original software. If you use this software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product
documentation is required.
3. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must not be misrepresented as being
the original software.
4. This notice must be included in any original source distribution.
For the latest version, bug reporting and tech support, go to:
Takaro.net
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INSTALLATION
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1. Copy the CryImporter folder and its contents to the 'Scripts' directory in your 3ds max
installation.
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USAGE NOTES
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1. Running the script
1 Make sure you have the Crytek Exporter installed before running the importer, or it will not
work correctly. There are features in the exporter that the importer relies on.
1 Once script is installed in your 3ds max scripts directory, start 3ds max and go to the
utilities tab
2 Press the 'MAXScript' button in the 'Utilities' rollout
3 Press the 'Run Script' button and in the dialog box, select the 'CryImporter' directory, and
then 'CryImporter.ms'
4 Select 'CryImporter' from the 'Utilities' drop-down list
2. Importing geometry from a CGF/CGA file
1 If you want the model to appear see-through when it is imported (to see the bones better, for
instance), make sure the 'See-Through Mesh' checkbox is marked. All textures are still imported
for the model. This option simply sets the 'See-Through' display property of the mesh.
2 If you want to import a character model and modify it, you may want to uncheck the 'Apply Face
Expressions' checkbox. This will stop any facial expressions from being applied via a Morpher
modifier, which can then be applied later using the 'Apply Face Expressions' button. This is
useful if you are modifying a character model but not changing the face, since the morpher data
in the CGF file can probably still be applied to the model in this case, saving a lot of time.
There is no guarantee that it will work, though, since some changes to the underlying mesh may
alter the vertex numbering, which is what the morpher data depends on.
3 Press the "Import CGF/CGA" button and in the dialog box, select the model to import. If you wish
to import a CGA file, select CGA from the 'Files of type' drop-down list.
4 Due to limitations with the Crytek Exporter, it is not possible to automatically set the shader
name for materials that are imported. This is probably due to a bug, since all other parameters
are settable. Due to this, the shader names must be set manually by the user. There may also be a
notice that you need to activate the Transparency->Opacity checkbox. A messagebox will come up
telling you to open the MaxScript listener window, where the details will be listed. This is done
by pressing F11.
5 If your model is a character model with facial expressions, you will be prompted to set the
'Morph target min offset' to 0.0 in the CryExporter. This is another action that cannot be done
automatically, but is necessary for the correct exporting of facial expressions.
3. Importing animations from a CAF file
1 First import the geometry file that you want to add the animations to.
NOTE: If you import a geometry file and then save it as a .max file, you can't load that .max file
at a later date and import new animations into it. You must import the geometry in the same
session as the animations so that the CryImporter can store internal information that allows it to
match up the animations to the right bones in the model.
If you want to import multiple animations, you must either import them all in one session (you can
use the 'append' feature mentioned in the next step to help with this), or you must export the
model you imported previously and saved to a .max file, and then import it back in again when you
want to import in more animations.
2 If you want the animation frames to be added after the current animation range (the range
currently shown on your track bar at the bottom of the screen), make sure the 'Append to current
range' checkbox is marked. If it is unmarked, the animation will be imported starting at frame 0
3 If you want to import a single animation file, press the "Import CAF" button and in the dialog box,
select the animation to import. If your model has a CAL file that lists several animations to be
used with the model, you can import all of the animations at once by pressing the 'Import CAL'
button. You then specify the CAL file to use, and the importer will attempt to import all of the
CAF animation files in sequential order, appending each one to the end of the previous one. You
will then be given a list of the animation ranges in the MaxScript Listener window, so you know
where each animation starts and ends.
4. Configuration
4.1 Base Asset Path
Since CGF/CGA files contain texture paths as relative paths, it must be supplied with an absolute
base path to use in order to find the correct textures to apply to meshes. For this to work
properly, the user must extract some of the FarCry PAK files so that the necessary textures can be
located by the Importer. Typically, extraction of textures.pak and objects.pak is sufficient. Once
you do this, you should have a directory tree like the following:
C: --- MyAssets --- Objects
--- Textures
In this case your base path will be "C:MyAssets".
NOTE: The Crytek Exporter exports texture paths by removing the first directory name, and then
keeping the rest, so for example, the texture "C:MyAssetsTexturesfoo.dds" is exported as
"Texturesfoo.dds". Because of this, you should set up your directory structure so that there is
only one directory above the Object and Texture directory level, or else your models will probably
not work properly inside FarCry or the Sandbox.
1 Press the 'Set Base Asset Path' button and in the dialog box, navigate to the base directory.
4.2 Alternate Asset Path
Since users may want to import models that use custom textures, an optional alternate path may be
specified for locating textures. If specified, this path will be checked first, in order to support
custom versions of textures from the original Far Cry distribution.
2 Press the 'Set Alternate Asset Path' button and in the dialog box, navigate to the base
directory where the custom textures are located.
4.3 Configuration File
Various properties may be set in the CryImporter.ini configuration file, so they don't have to be
set every time the importer is used. This file should be located in the base scripts directory of
your 3ds Max installation.
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NOTES
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* The Morpher modifier is used for facial animation. This modifier requires a copy of the mesh to be
made for each facial animation, which is typically about 20 different animations for a character in
FarCry. For clarity, these meshes are hidden during the import process.
* Facial expressions are done through the Morpher modifier, which makes copies of the basic body mesh,
with small alterations for the facial expressions. This means that if you change the basic mesh, the
copies made by the Morpher modifier will no longer be correct. The 'Apply Face Expressions' checkbox
and button allow you to not apply the Morpher modifier until after you've changed the basic mesh. As
long as you don't alter the face on the basic mesh, you should still be able to correctly apply the
facial expressions to your modified model. Deleting vertices may also cause problems, since vertices
will get renumbered, and if the facial vertices get renumbered the morpher data will no longer be
correct.
* Bones typically do not look the same when they are imported. This is due to the fact that the
CryExporter appears to sometimes export bone meshes badly, but I can't find a pattern to be able to
programmatically determine which bones are faulty. Also, some files seem to contain only a few of
the bone meshes. Due to these problems, the bone hierarchy is built using some guesses. It will
still work the same, but the bones will sometimes look different. I try to construct bones that
touch their child bones, but when this doesn't work quite right, I make them short, like dummy
helpers. I also try to size bones appropriately so that they don't obscure the mesh too much, but
this works better in some cases than others.
* Some CGF files seem to have references to textures without any path, implying that they should be
found in the same directory as the CGF file. Unfortunately, you need to specify an absolute path when
you create a bitmap in 3ds max. If the importer can't find the texture in either of the paths
specified in the config file, it will look in the path where the CGF file was located. If it's there,
it will use that path for the texture, and give a warning that it has done so. The reason that this
matters is that part of that path will now end up in the exported file if you use CryExporter later on.
If your CGF file and textures are not currently sitting in an appropriately pathed place (like
C:MasterCDObjects...), you may end up with a path reference in your CGF file that won't work in
Sandbox or FarCry. I can't see any solution to this except warning you of this behaviour!
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VERSION HISTORY
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1.1 (2006-04-29) - Fixed bug with importing opacity values in materials
- Added support for CAL files
- Added support for importing morpher targets at an arbitrary time, either from the
last imported mesh, or from any arbitrary mesh during a later session (this is just
so people don't have to do all the work on their mesh in one session; it would be
foolish to attempt to import mesh morphs from any model but the one you started with)
1.0.5 (2006-04-04) - Added handling for version 744 BoneNameList chunks (not quite obsolete like I thought)
- Added graceful handling of models without BoneInitialPos chunks. I only know of one
model like this so far, and it's a faulty one (mortar.cgf), but the goal is to gracefully
import every model that shipped with FarCry without crashing.
- Fixed import of models that contain both BoneAnim data and VertAnim data (such as P90.cgf)
We now ignore vert anim data in this case. It seems to give the right results, so I'll keep
it this way unless I find out some way to apply the vert anim data correctly in this case.
1.0.4 (2006-04-03) - Fixed bug caused by 3ds max 6 (maybe 7 too) inability to convert strings to booleans
- Fixed bug where a particular GUI widget property is not supported in 3ds max 6
1.0.3 (2006-03-17) - Added various error checking to material creation
- Added error check for mesh chunks that say they have bone info, but don't
- Added support for v745 material chunks
(since these appear to still be used by some files)
- Added support for textures in the local directory to an imported model, if they
can't be found in the configured directories first.
- Materials with a physical material specified now have their physicalize flags
automatically set to true, regardless of whether or not the CGF file had the
flag set. I don't know if this flag is used at all by the game, but it seems
that it should be on in this case, even though most files don't seem to do it.
1.0.2 (2006-03-10) - Fixed bug in mesh chunk importing due to discrepancy between official
documentation for CGF file format and reality
1.0.1 (2006-02-20) - Added error checking for zero length ranges in timing chunks
1.0 (2006-01-30) - Added support for vertex animation chunks
- Added support for v826 controller chunks
0.7 (2006-01-27) - Added CAF file support
- Added support for most of the properties in CryTextures
(don't know what to do with nthFrame, refSize, and refBlur)
- Added support for v827 controller chunks
0.6 (2006-01-24) - Added support for boneLightBinds
- Added support for mesh morphs
0.5 (2006-01-22) - Added helpers
- Added lights
- Added bones
- Added skin modifier with correct assigning of vertex weights
0.4 (2006-01-18) - Added support for materials, so we now have fully textured meshes
0.3 (2006-01-14) - Displays basic meshes with names, but no other data
- Added INI file support
0.2 (2006-01-13) - Reads and prints all chunk types
0.1 (2005-12-30) - Reads CGF, CGA, CAL files, and can extract chunk headers.