
This section provides a brief description of the Color, Normal, Roughness, and Metallic texture maps used in physically-based materials. For more information about physically-based materials and the workflows to create them, refer to The PBR Guide on the Adobe website. Texture maps can be created by scanning real-world objects, or by creating them in design software such as Quixel Mixer, Adobe Photoshop or Adobe Substance. The following types of texture maps must be added to materials to achieve these properties: Color, Normal, Roughness, and Metallic. When creating physically-based materials for Twinmotion, texture maps are added to the materials to recreate the appearance of color and other surface details. Physically-based materials react to lighting and shading in the Twinmotion ecosystem, and aim to reproduce accurate and natural-looking results in all lighting environments. The Materials in the Twinmotion Assets Library follow physically-based rendering (PBR) principles. Paid subscriptions now start at $9/month, providing 60 texture downloads or 25 model downloads, with additional downloads available at higher subscription tiers or by buying more download credits.Texture Maps for Physically-Based Materials The files are licensed for use in commercial projects. LotPixel’s free texture sets are provided as JPEG files and can be used in any DCC application or game engine that supports PBR workflows, including 3ds Max, Blender, Cinema 4D, Maya, Unity, and many others. Users with paid subscriptions can also download textures at up to 16K resolution. The free assets represent just under half the textures in LotPixel’s commercial library, including decals, 3D scans of small household and environment objects, and a pack of weapon models. Paid subscriptions provide access to higher-resolution textures and 3D models


New additions to the library include the marble and granite textures shown above, plus a range of other natural stone textures, and interior tiling, particularly porcelain tiles in a variety of finishes. LotPixel an online asset library, has expanded its library, which now counts over 1.350 of its sets of scan-based PBR texture maps free for download.
