I try the tech that WILL replace CG one day
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- Опубліковано 8 лют 2025
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Wren explains Neural Radiance Fields (a.k.a. NeRFs) and why this brand new, next-generation 3D scanning technology is going to be the next big thing in image capture/CGI.
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What a time to be alive!
Nice crossover! You should suggest more tech for them to test out!
I was holding onto my papers waiting for this comment.
Haha after the reference, I had to look for you in the comments ^^
By the way, the first time I heard about NeRF was in Two Minute Papers back in 2020!
The legend himself.
“Two more papers down the line”
“What a time to be alive”
A fellow of culture, I see
I was squeezing my papers before the final demo
@@geobot9k Hold on to them!
Dear fellow scholars this is two-minute papers with Doctor Károly Zsolnai-Fehér
When I hear the references that I understand and then I see others do that as well - I know I am doing something right.
@@LocaLGh0sT can you explain the references maybe, i dont know them
I love his pure passion. You can really tell Wren absolutely loves what he does and the industry he works in. That passion is inspiring and feels me with legitimate joy to see somebody with pure love for something they do.
Wren is the Bill Nye of VFX. His excitement and on camera presence makes me interested in everything he’s about to say.
He's my favorite member.
I was about to post literally the same comment lol, crazy I wasn't the only one to think of the Bill Nye comparison
Couldn't have said better ❤️
absolutely
He needs his own show like Bill Nye to show kids in school and on Netflix. Would def get kids excited about technology and all!
Everyone talks about how Peter is a genius, and he is that kind of genius that uses his tools to the greatest artistry with ease, but let me tell you something, Wren is one of a hell of a genius as well, and he is one of those even rarer geniuses that instead of perfecting his art, his art itself is creation. This man is the heart of Corridor Crew in almost every sense. All other people in the Crew is amazing as well, not gonna lie, I'm kinda jealous of working in a place like this.
Wren is kind of like Picasso - Always too busy inventing something new to make anything that looks great up close.
found wrens alt account
wait until you guys realize that EVERYONE in corridor is a genius
I hope this brings back miniature-usage for movies.
you could have a detailed, realistic, scanned miniature with all the correct reflections and also have all the cinematic freedom CGI gives you if you're not happy with the shot.
PLUS you can do digital camera movements you couldn't do in the real miniature.
That’s actually pretty brilliant, the only thing is that miniatures do take allot of time and money to build. But still, very very smart.
Love that wren literally ever ages
I been thinking that too, could be. new era of hybrid "tokusatsu" kaiju movies.
@@greenman2240 They do, but you spend a lot of time building digital environments as well and even if a physical miniature takes longer, they have so much detail you just couldn't have in a digital scene - mainly 'cause your artists just aren't going to include every single hair, dust speck, scratch or whatever.
I hope it doesn't. I hope live action dies down and we see an animation boom.
Can we just appreciate that Corridor genuinely educates us every single episode? Basically physics, vfx, and film courses that they perfect with entertaining visuals, guests, and of course CREW MEMBERS. Happy to see how much Corridor as a company has expanded and grown.
Edit: Not to sound like a stalker 👀 But I live in LA and sometimes I purposely take the I-10 in hopes of one day seeing Wren or another Crew Member doing something crazy on their roof. Looks like I missed out on seeing Wren acting like a giant 😭
🤓
🤓
Yea this channel is top tier for sure.
🤓
I watch so much educational videos, that things people explain that i already know, i just ignore...
Thinking a bit, you are right, every video they explain something.
But this video is something else, holy shit, this was spectacular, the end was becoming so close to another channel, until "2 papers down the line", That is a very Strong reference!! it was not coincidence... im very exited with all this knowledge and people coming together...
I love how Wren is literally showing us the cutting edge of this technology. It's awesome to see what's coming
The first two renders just straight up blew my mind and left me speechless, like how can it be so realistic ?
This is insane Wren! Can't wait what the future holds for NeRF's.
What a time to be alive!
I want a invite to luma
Insane technology 🔥
all fun and games until they release the buffs
Love the Two Minute Papers reference at the end. This is really interesting technology. I studied art and animation in college but ended up in a business intelligence/machine learning career. I never though in a millions years the two would overlap.
Something that I've told a bunch of friends that work in different fields (psychology, law, teaching, chemistry, etc) is that AI is becoming so relevant in so many fields, that they should expect the same in their fields not too far into the future. Deepfakes, AI art, GPT3, etc are just some examples of primitive fields and we are still experimenting with it.
Amazing how much Imagery and VFX technology progressed in 10 years, even things like simple 3d camera tracks with CGI were super rare on youtube or indie productions.
Man every time wren makes his own video he just puts everything into it and I love it
S tier content
I could see Wren as a teacher. He is so good at explaining and his excitement would make students become engrossed in his lesson.
We all became his students the moment we hit "Subscribe". :D
I have a feeling making millions of dollars and doing what you love contributes to that.
Getting paid crap to teach a bunch of brats who don't wanna learn? Yeah he wouldn't be like this lol
Isn't he already? I'm certainly learning a lot from his videos. :)
@@TheTuttle99 I think you might be right. Anyway i like the way he teaches here. He doesn’t give classes, he provides useful knowledge.
@@jakeydakey absolutely, I look forward to his videos
Wren is one of the most incredible people to just watch because his passion, experience and skill are all on full display.
Heck, everyone at corridor is like that, definitely one of the greatest youtube channels.
4:07
There was this time that I woke up and noticed that the entire room had a yellow tint to it. I thought I was imagining things because I just woke up, but my brother was also seeing this strange, yellow phenomenon.
We searched our room and discovered that a window produced a single beam of light, which bounced off of a bright-yellow shirt, changing the color of the entire room.
I remember picking up the shirt, then the entire room reverted back to its original color. It was cool to discover
I once had a similar effect, where a friend wore a bright pink shirt, and at night, their white car looked completely pink due to the reflection of the headlights.
You got a free Raytracing intro course.
I see Wren watches Two Minute Papers. Amazing video! This technology seems to already have great potential for films, my only question is how distinguishing real videos from fabricated ones will be approached in the future.
I was coming here for this exact thing. Like I was hoping for them to mention 2 minute papers somewhere but they never do. I know it's not nefarious but it feels weird that the page is seldom actually brought up.
\
@@joshuaellis3051 there is a very clear reference to 2 minute papers at the end.
Lol in the future you'll run your media through an AI software which will tell you if the media it just scanned was generated by an AI or not🤣
I think referencing with the quotes it’s the most credits they can give. Else it would be like thanking Bill Nye for every time you applied some physics concept. It’s okay if that’s how you came to know it, but in the end he’s just a science communicator an referencing the name of the technology is actually more important. Right?
What a time to be alive!
Toward the end of this video, when Wren is filming on the street with his phone and say's "CAR" .It instantly reminded me of Doug the dog in the movie UP, where he is distracted by a squirrel and shouts out Squirrel, funny.
I'm an engineering technologist and work with Autodesk Civil 3D for a living and find this insanely interesting for its potential commercial purposes. I deal with drone survey a lot and photogrammetry aerial photos as well. With this type of tech, we could potentially be able to use our drones to more accurately capture water levels in lakes, dams, etc. since they have the same issue as that chrome ball where the data comes in looking wonky and frankly, like crap due to the reflecting light. As a result, I usually have to mask or trim out that data since it's inaccurate and looks bad in a topography map. I'll definitely be sharing this video with some of my engineering colleagues though to see its other potential uses like capturing images at night. That could be huge too as we usually could never capture good images or drone scans at night, and this would open our capabilities significantly as well. I love your guys' content and love how it keeps my brain thinking about how some of these tools can help in other fields like mine.
These are some cool thoughts. :)
Incredible! I wonder when we'll be able to capture moving elements and render animations with Nerf.
Atmospheric adventure games are gonna become even better image Plague Tale type game like this
@@user-ch9vd4cd3t Yeah, but he's only cutting himself out of the video, he's not actually capturing a moving NERF
God, that'd probably require SOOOOOOOO much data to have an animated radiance field like that though
ok this was a year ago, time to see how it's improved... and someone needs to make an in-depth course on how to do full scenes including 3D animations in this workflow
Wren, I feel like this video is one that represents your heart for this channel. This video wasn't to show how it is the perfect tool. Because perfection leads to stagnation. It was to inspire people and point them in a direction to evolve theirselves in their craft.
can this geometry be geolocated?
@@bryanlewis8777 it's not geometry, it's a neural radiance field
Geo cant locate the geometry
It's seriously so awesome but even more compelling because he's so stoked on it
It's really bugging me though, i seriously can't find that video from a while back where they tour the virtual production, think it's like a red Mars like background
I found an old VFX react where they say go check out out but it's not anywhere near that video in chronological order
Love the callout to 2 minute papers in the end, fits perfectly
I was thinking of him through out the video. I hope he sees this
I just left a 2 minute papers comment without seeing their reference in the video lol
Edit: the comment I left is exactly what he said
Why? Does? Two? Minute papers? Speak? Like? This?
I can't? Get through? His? Videos? Because? I find it? So? Annoying?
@@C.I... He's not a native English speaker. 🤦
@@jonathanrynjah I thought his voice was AI generated...
yup, 1 year later, we have tons of improvement on NERF and Gaussian Splatting and we even have 4D gaussian splats (with time control) what a time to be alive
I don't think I've ever commented on a CC video before but the energy in this one just brought me alive.
I'm not a VFX artist, I'd barely call myself a videographer, but this channel continues to entertain and educate me in a vast array of different ways.
Thank you Wren and team for being you. Much respect and love 🖤
Thanks for tuning in!
The enthusiasm of Wren is unmatched and contagious.
This is fantastic! Thanks for breaking it down man. I definitely see the potential and it's something I knew nothing about. Well done, keep'm coming. You guys are great
The fact that you're able to get shots as good as this in a short amount of time when the technology is new and you just started learning it is crazy. I can't imagine how far this will push things in the future.
As someone who’s trying to learn 3D and cgi, it’s always amazing to learn about such cool new technologies
the problem is that what you learn today, can become irrelevant 2 days later
Same
@@dsfs17987 the fundamentals never become obsolete.
@@MrGamelover23 i disagree
@@MrGamelover23 they most certainly do, well, not obsolete, but irrelevant, good for conversation reminiscing the good old days though
1:55 if it's a chrome ball, it's just as easy to 3d scan the room without it and add a reflective sphere to get a 100% perfect model.
The VFX in this video are totally awesome, but I think what goes underappreciated is just how good the video looks. Like just the shots of Wren at his desk or outside doing camera and drone things are beautifully shot. Props to Nick (or whomever is behind the camera) for all that.
Now if Nick could just teach Wren how to shoot steadily with a camera or phone instead of waving it around like a madman it would be a massive improvement. I almost felt ill in some parts of this.
Wren is literally my hero, he inspires me everyday to look for solutions for problems that I decide to make.
Car!
Do a NERF of New York City in its entirety. Film studios everywhere will be able make “film” in the city where it would be too expensive or technical.
That’s the future use case I could see with this. Less of an entire city, but definitely specific locations within larger cities, or places that would be unsafe to shoot, such as an abandoned underground tunnel. No longer need to be “on location” or pay for expensive filming permits. I’m sure it will still end up being monetized in some way.
@@AmericanAvenue I really hope it's open sourced honestly.
Brah, all big studios probably already have a standard NY in 3D in their librairy
@@wnazgul *Library.
And they don't have all of New York City as a Neural Radiance Field.
@@wnazgul yeah i can definitely see the potential for some big studios like Lockheed Martin or NASA ...oh wait.
That shot of the pan was pretty mind blowing to me. Even when you said it was a NRF and not real my mind was still convinced that it was 100% real! Crazy! Can’t wait for a whole CG short with this tech!
well thats because it followed the exact same camera movement right? the real interesting thing is when you change the camera movement to something that didnt exist. this basically allows you to move and look around in a video which im sure many people have dreamt of before
wren’s crazy premise videos are my absolute favorites on this channel, every single one is so cool
I got my whole family hooked on saying "What a Time to be Alive" all the time for no reason. They have not idea where it came from.
Lmao. Thats hillarious
The nod to Two Minute Papers made me smile.
The "two papers down the line" made me wonder if homage was being paid, and then the "What a time to be alive" put a dumb grin on my face.
This NRF stuff could easily revolutionize map making in video games too, it’d be really cool to get 1:1 references for objects and rooms
I would love to play cod in a map of my city
Oh wow that's such a great application
You might as hell use photogrammetry as NRFs are essentially a video/rendered output. Not to mention that the density of the geometry (and the quality of loop; they look like STLs) wouldn't do well for real-time physics.
For FMV games, though, that might be a cool way to speed up production time and create new story branches. Or make adventure games (like King's Quest) where you just want a new angle of a scene you've already scanned.
An extreme push to the tech would be maybe a Myst style (online) game where you tell the server to "move forward" and it processes a new image for you to look at. All depending on how fast it processes the renders.
Now, anything related to how limiting rendering is should be taken with a grain of salt and it's always in context with the current technology. We've come a long way from printing pixels on screens, to sprites, to polygons, to Unreal 5. So, in theory, if we can build GPUs that could render NRF in real-time then, yes, map making or any asset creation would be significantly different.
you can already do that with photometry. what it would help however is with the behavior of materials. you can look at your rendered scene and compare with the NeRF to see if you got the materials right.
@@gixG17
Well the geometry density could work with an engine like Unreal 5 which has automatic scalable rendered geometry. The important part of NRF is the lighting rendering, which any game engine would have to somehow incorporate into their systems. It very well could help with streamlining prebaked lighting or raytrace ready textures in games with a realistic aesthetic though, since you're doing away with setting the reflectiveness and roughness of an object to light it with raytraced lighting.
As a young beginner vfx artist, this is absolutely thrilling to watch! My brain has been doing backflips this entire video
Feeble?
That was fantastic and i literally do not understand it at all. I wish i did
Sup Alex
Aha the Clarkman himself
3D scanning + machine learning
@@Mr_Doon = reverse engineered 1st principles
Me neither. I like the logo flickering in the the bottom right corner. That helps.
This is crazy!!! Love it!
Ikr!
My mind was absolutely BLOWN by this video!!! I had dreams of tech like this when I was younger, I can't believe that it's actually possible.
Not even a VFX person and this just blows my mind, you guys are insane!
Love the 2-Minute Papers reference at the end! Can't wait to see where this tech goes!
*This comment was brought to you by weights and biases*
15:18 lmao thx editor for leaving in Wren going into dog mode
Wren has to be the most impressive person I have ever seen, he gives me inspiration with filmmaking that I never thought was possible, I'm so glad that he can express his idea and dreams when it comes to VFX and the future of VFX
That TwoMinutePapers quote at the end is just... *chef's kiss*
I think Dr. Károly Zsolnai-Fehér will be as excited about this video as Wren is!
Came back to corridor crew after a long time, this channel still got better. I thought it cannot get any better that that
Wow! Even with saying this is early on and the shots Wren did are “not production ready” it’s still REALLY impressive and SOOO much potential. All the tech that has come out in the last 3-5 years has been mind blowing with what it will eventually become.
Wren puts so much passion into his videos. He could almost have his own channel and it would be insanely good
On the lighting explanation, I just demonstrated to my class just how important it is to incorporate as much of the 3D elements in the immediate surroundings of a mesh in order to get the most accurate lighting and reflections. This adds that extra bit of realism to the render, even if the extra objects will never be seen in the shot. As for the NERF thing, I'm in my 50s and still learning my virtual production workflow, and now this. I'm getting too old.
Hey thanks for watching my video! That's an awesome lighting example! Yeah I've done that too, even if I'm just projecting the footage onto simple geo in the scene. I agree, it adds subtle color and brightness to parts of a render that otherwise wouldn't have had it, but should.
As for the NERF thing, you got this! If you can handle rendering scenes you can handle nerfs. Especially if you know photogrammetry! As long as the data input is good, navigating is like any 3D scene but there are basically no render settings! It just spits out renders that look like footage. It's shockingly easy in theory, but the current tools make it tedious. It's just gonna get easier from here!
You're not too old. You're like 10 years older than me and I'm just getting started baby! Love my meshroom and stuff so need to look into this.
@@SirWrender I've seen photogrammetry combined with some manual work to recreate an entire house, inside and outside.
Now I think with NeRF it's even more interesting. Because you can use it to feed the photogrammetry software with even more images and not dealing with lighting problem.
I imagine this being very useful in sport replays. If they can 3D track a ball, disc, or whatever and then virtually follow it's flight, watching from the ball's point of view, that would be incredible.
They could actually do with this in the World Cup right now for accurately judging offside calls.
Would also make it easier and take less time for realtors to do virtual walkthroughs but it would be even more immersive since those are usually not free roam. I would also be very interested in taking old videos of the house I grew up in and popping into it in VR.
Great idea!
I believe the ball itself already holds a ton of electronics and generates quite a bit of data in a game so all of that is used to determine precisely whether ball is offside, etc. I might be wrong but I read about it some time ago.
@@alpuhagame What sport currently has electronics in their balls?
Wanted to say this to you guys at Corridor.
This team is the reason why I want to work and delve into VFX. I remembered the very first video I saw from you guys and it was DUBSTEP GUNS.
I remember I was in awe with what I was watching and how people who weren’t apart of Hollywood could do it?! Thank you for the inspiration when I was only 13. Thank you for sticking to UA-cam and for always being YOU! You are guys are definitely a force within the VFX/Cinema world.
-Meech
We love you, Wren! Thank you and the team for sharing your passion and putting in the extra hours, you guys are awesome
I love how excited you get about this kind of stuff, Wren. You're truly a pioneer in your field and it's important that artists try to push these boundaries and use the new tools we're given!
I'm surprised movie or game companies haven't hired Corridor to help with their movie or game. They have cutting edge technology every time there's new tech. I love everything these guys have done
As an architect, I’m very interested in how this might work in combination with a real hand-made model or digital model of a building or a district overlayed with a drone shot. It would save SO MUCH time over having to model or render an entire city or background and could be updated over time.
As an architect are you a groundbreaking, outside the box thinker or one entrenched in archaic ways of construction & building design?
I've seen photogrammetry combined with some manual work to recreate an entire house, inside and outside.
Now I think with NeRF it's even more interesting. Because you can use it to feed the photogrammetry software with even more images and not dealing with lighting problem.
Keep evolving Corridor.. it's been a pleasure to watch the channel over the years.
16:26 I loved the Two Minute Papers reference there
Wren, you have such an incredible ability to communicate complex tech in a way that makes is easy to understand.
Imagine live augmented reality with this. Overlay a beach setting in your house, talking to your friend across the world projected right in front of you as if they were there with you.
For those two things, you don’t need AR. Just use a good projector and project the image into a corner of you room. Your brain does the rest…
@@lordinquisitor6651 But you can't project a person into the middle of your room by projecting them into the corner of the room.
But if you were live-capturing a NERF where they are and live-rendering that into AR where you are, you could now have a pretty realistic version of them that you can walk around and stuff. If you set it up both ways, that'd be interesting.
My only worry is that this might be too much data to process, transmit and render in real time.
@@cameron7374 Two words: Virtual Strippers.
@@cameron7374 if it’s too much right now, I’m certain that in the not-so-distant future, it’ll be possible. Technology makes leaps and bounds while you’re looking away from it
@@ShirtlessLuke2 Definitely, and I'm excited for that.
"Look just two papers down the road. What a time to be alive!" -- I see what you did there 🙂Also, you say it's not production ready, but what you really mean is just that it's not strictly better than the much more labor intensive methods used today. It already looks better than pretty much anything I remember from pre-2000, and some after that.
Last quote was real nice touch! Really! What a time to be alive!
This is actually mind blowing, we're witnessing a breakthrough in technology happening in front of our eyes, it is such a special moment
Two minute papers always says, "look not where we are now, but where we could be two papers from now".
Exciting technology for sure.
So, put out a year ago and I've been watching you for years now, but only just got recommended this video via the algorithm.
This tech is actually insane and it'd be interesting to see how far this has come within the last year..
I always love your content and consider you to be at the forefront of tech advancement. If something new is out, chances out you're either making a vid on it, or have already done so. Great stuff, guys.
I love it every time we get a video where Wren is bursting with enthusiasm wanting to show us something new he learned of or a cool idea that popped into his head. This channel is amazing and I've learned so many fun and interesting things from everyone at Corridor.
All of my brains exploded 🤯 Back in art school I learned photogrammetry using a projected grid, a camera, and software. I also worked on a project with LIDAR scans. It’s crazy how much things have advanced since then.
I love the "what a time to be alive" as a reference to the 2 minute papers chan :)
this is crazy cool can't wait to see what you guys do with it
Wait.. How did you do this?
I love these Wren led videos, they're always so interesting tech wise, and he's such a great host.
i love the different types of videos corridor makes from straight up documentrarys to strapping nerfs on drones and giving jan a pinky knife
That has not just a new big potential for VFX, it's a complete new way of recording things.
I am thinking about using that stuff to walk through the picture in VR.
Did you find the app?
Wow that’s a great idea! Very exciting!
Probably one of the best Corridor videos i’ve ever seen (and ive been following meticulously for over 10 years now)! Extremely well thought out, inspiring and entertaining all in one! Hats off to Wren 🧢👒🎩
This is going to make smaller UA-cam channels explode with crazy vfx
16:32 *_What a time to be alive!_*
Omg, this is one of the most incredible and sick tech videos I've ever seen. So much respect to Wren able to explain such a crazy yet mind-blowing tech in a non dry and relatable way that kinda makes you want to give this a go. Awesome job👍
Photoscaninng in games is just the 3D aquivilent of what they did in Mortal Kombat
Wren, thank you so much for introducing me to this technology. Whatever tools this will become will be perfect for my ideas! I appreciate all the work that you, and the whole crew do. You guys have have truly inspired me, hope you all are well over the holidays 😁
I just looked at Paul Franklin's whole filmography and I was surprised I've been loving his work since "The 10th Kingdom" in 2000 when I was 8 years old. My family would always keep an eye out for when it was on TV.
Sheeesh this is amazing! Thanks for your energy and taking us on an adventure with this incredible technology!
Wren can you please make a class of some sort about VFX? You're the best and most engaging teacher I've ever seen. I would have had straight A's if my teachers were all like Wren. He has an amazing ability to make potentially boring topics really engaging through his pure passion for the subject matter.
I doubt I'm alone in saying I would pay up to say $50 for a high quality tutorial. Say 10 hours of tutorial minimum. I'm not even in a field remotely similar to VFX, but he's that good of a teacher to where I actively want to learn the subject matter and learn to tell a story with it.
Pay Wren whatever he needs Corridor, he's irreplaceable.
This is fascinating, absolutely gonna be seeing this used in movies and shows and video games in the coming years. Even though it’s still rudimentary for now the potential it already has is huge, really excited to see where this goes
YOu guys are always ahead of the game. Literally after this video dropped 10 months ago, I felt like every IG video influencer hopped on the Luma AI train and started showing it off a couple of months after you guys. THANK YOU for always sharing your knowledge. Corridor is the BEST.
Wren and team, this was an excellent encapsulation of progress. This video will be something I and many others reference back to in the future :)
That's so cool, Corridor Crew literally one of the best VFX educators. Also what's the name of the app for 3D camera tracking in 7:31?
Lmk if someone adds
byplay camera
I've been watching NERF papers for a while, and the technology looks really promising. As a guy who's been playing around with photogrammetry for the past couple of years, I'm super excited to finally see a development in the field of converting real scenes into 3D geometry!
Wren: "Two papers down the line"... "What a time to be alive"
Me: I understood those references 😅
Please do a mini series on sound design - Ben Jacquier incredible and a good reference!
Yes!!
As a Koven fan, didn't expect you to see here 😄
"2 papers down the line" ... "what a time to be alive". A nod to Two Minute Papers right!?
I just love how Wren is always delighted about new tech
turns out that my cousin actually first developed this with a few of his friends. cool to see u guys using it
Watching the content you guys produce reminds me of the enjoyment I had in watching Mythbusters with my dad when I was younger. Thanks for making such fun videos!
This is incredible! If this is what one guy can do, the quality will sky rocket when you have entire vfx teams using this tech on movies
As someone who's had to do production photogrammetry, this is insanely awesome. I cannot wait to see how this evolves!
This was making my heart skip a beat. I absolutely agree this this feels like a moment right when everything changes. Like the first time I messed with Stable Diffusion and got a result that I could not point to a sign that a human didn't airbrush this as a painting, and how vastly different that was from using Dall-E mini. And all that's been just this YEAR. When I was a kid, the computer lab had Commodore 64s with Sim City and Rocky's Boots.
15:57 planting an idea in someone’s head? This really is INCEPTION! 😄🤓
Wow! I am very look forward to watch more about this in short future! Thanks!!!
Oke maybe this is a crazy thought... but if it's fed through simple videos, can't you use this inside of video games to recreate the scenes without ripping the models out?
Loved the Two Minutes Paper reference 😂