Glowing textures (Source): Difference between revisions
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Common selfillum textures can be found in [[White]]. | Common selfillum textures can be found in [[White]]. | ||
==$selfillum | ==$selfillum== | ||
Self | Self illumination applies fake light to a surface, irregardless of the true light that the surface receives from the environment. This is useful for parts of a model that emit their own visible light, like the filament in a light bulb or a glowing LED on a control panel. The self illumination effect can be masked with a texture. | ||
{{warning|<code>$selfillum</code> cannot be used with <code>$translucent</code> or <code>$alphatest</code> on [[model]]s. Use the <code>UnlitGeneric</code> shader instead or the <code>$detail</code> workaround.}} | |||
{{warning| | |||
[[LightmappedGeneric]] | [[LightmappedGeneric]] | ||
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} | } | ||
If | By default, <code>$selfillum</code> uses the [[alpha channel]] of the base texture as a mask. If the alpha channel of your base texture is used for something else, you can specify a separate <code>$selfillummask</code> texture. | ||
[[LightmappedGeneric]] | [[LightmappedGeneric]] | ||
{ | { | ||
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'''$selfillummask''' <texture> | '''$selfillummask''' <texture> | ||
} | } | ||
With an opaque mask, <code>$selfillum</code> effectively works like <code>UnlitGeneric</code>. The surface will ignore all light from the environment and appear fullbright. | |||
Mask values between 0.0 and 1.0 apply a minimum brightness effect to the surface, while still allowing it to receive light from the environment. This threshold effect is useful for objects like computer screens, which should be visible in darkness but become overwhelmed in bright sunlight. | |||
===Additional parameters=== | ===Additional parameters=== | ||
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{{MatParam|$selfIllumFresnelMinMaxExp|matrix|Default: 0.0 1.0 1.0. Not the same Fresnel ranges as <code>[[Phong materials#Phong Fresnel ranges|$phongfresnelranges]].</code> | {{MatParam|$selfIllumFresnelMinMaxExp|matrix|Default: 0.0 1.0 1.0. Not the same Fresnel ranges as <code>[[Phong materials#Phong Fresnel ranges|$phongfresnelranges]].</code> | ||
: The first value is the minimum illumination, second value is the maximum illumination and the final value is the Fresnel exponent.|since={{src07}}|dx9=1}} | : The first value is the minimum illumination, second value is the maximum illumination and the final value is the Fresnel exponent.|since={{src07}}|dx9=1}} | ||
[[Image:glow_selfillum.jpg|thumb|256px|left|A selfillum texture | [[Image:glow_selfillum.jpg|thumb|256px|left|A selfillum mask texture.]]{{clr}} | ||
==$detail== | ==$detail== |
Revision as of 15:44, 16 December 2021
Template:Otherlang2 A glowing texture is one that does not require another form of light to be lit up. It can create its own lightmap independent of all lighting sources and may even create light itself. This does not mean that the surface will appear pure white, just that the face will ignore any light it would receive. This is a key feature as a "glowing" black stays black and does not get brighter. The face achieves what is called fullbright, where the texture's pixels appear exactly the same color as they were saved.
There are several different ways to create this effect available in the Source engine.
For glowing textures on models or brush faces:
$selfillum
parameter, specified in a material's VMT. - Use this for most purposes, not compatible with transparency.- UnlitGeneric shader, specified in a material's VMT - Does not emit light, forces face to ignore all lighting, making it fullbright.
- $detail parameter with
$detailblendmode
value of 5 or 6, specified in a material's VMT - Same as$selfillum
, but more rudimentary and compatible with transparency. - Using info_lighting to fool a model into thinking it is brightly illuminated.
For glowing textures on brush faces only:
- Using
Minimum Light Level
entity keyvalue. - .rad file, mainly used for glowing textures on brushes. rad files are the only form of glowing textures that generate any map light. The file is processed line per line; on each line is simply the name of the texture, the RGB value of the light, and then the brightness of the light.
Common selfillum textures can be found in White.
$selfillum
Self illumination applies fake light to a surface, irregardless of the true light that the surface receives from the environment. This is useful for parts of a model that emit their own visible light, like the filament in a light bulb or a glowing LED on a control panel. The self illumination effect can be masked with a texture.

$selfillum
cannot be used with $translucent
or $alphatest
on models. Use the UnlitGeneric
shader instead or the $detail
workaround.LightmappedGeneric { $basetexture props/tvscreen005a $selfillum 1 }
By default, $selfillum
uses the alpha channel of the base texture as a mask. If the alpha channel of your base texture is used for something else, you can specify a separate $selfillummask
texture.
LightmappedGeneric { $basetexture props/tvscreen005a $selfillum 1 $selfillummask <texture> }
With an opaque mask, $selfillum
effectively works like UnlitGeneric
. The surface will ignore all light from the environment and appear fullbright.
Mask values between 0.0 and 1.0 apply a minimum brightness effect to the surface, while still allowing it to receive light from the environment. This threshold effect is useful for objects like computer screens, which should be visible in darkness but become overwhelmed in bright sunlight.
Additional parameters
$selfillumtint
$selfillummaskscale
$selfillummask
$selfillum_envmapmask_alpha
Note:
$selfillum_envmapmask_alpha
replaces the original$selfillum
command, so they cannot be used together.
$selfillumtexture
$selfIllumFresnel
$selfIllumFresnelMinMaxExp
$detail
If $selfillum
is not a viable option, a $detail
texture can be used instead. It can bypass the sv_consistency check on some games, such as in or
, to allow glowing textures where textures with
$selfillum
would cause you to be kicked from the server.
VMT lines required for a $detail
glow:
$detail models\weapons\pose\briefcase/briefcase_pickedup_red $detailscale 1 //scales the detail texture to same size as diffuse. $detailblendfactor 1 //lower values make the texture less visible. 0.0 - 1.0 $detailblendmode 5 //6 also works.
The detail texture itself must be completely black with the parts that should be glowing colored. Dark colors will glow less. You can not make a black glowing texture this way.

Using envmaps for a solid color glow
If for some reason you can't use $selfillum and can't do glow with $detail, you can still do a solid color glow on the material. As reflections are not affected by lighting, and appear to glow in the dark, specular reflections using cubemaps can be used. Unlike $selfillum, you can only make pixels glow in a color, additively, ie you can't make part of a texture glow, but add single color glow over it. Can be done using a white cubemap, and making the cubemap reflection visible only in some places per-pixel through an $envmapmask. You can also tint the cubemap glow to any color by $envmaptint
.rad files

example\exampletexture 128 192 96 400
Unlike $selfillum
or the UnlitGeneric
shader, lights of the specified color and brightness are generated in front of the world brush's face during VRAD complation. The brightness of the created lights is also affected by the density of the lightmap. Higher densities will produce a greater effect. The texture itself does not become fullbright, but the lights in front often make it seem so.
If a texture is specified in multiple places, it will be overridden by the latest information, for example: If both lights.rad and <game>.rad specified the same texture but <game>.rad was brighter, the light emitted in the compiled map would be the brighter <game>.rad version.
UnlitGeneric textures
The UnlitGeneric
shader forces the entire face to be full bright. The surface does not emit light, and light has no visible effect on the surface. Mainly used when the texture should appear to be a light source without forcing any light into creation. All that is required for the effect is to specify the materials shader as unlit generic. Because UnlitGeneric
s are their own shader they can be applied to both models and world brushes.
UnlitGeneric { $basetexture example\exampletexture }
A common use is that of skybox textures, the sky is always bright and the face the texture will appear on has no form of lighting itself.

$model 1
in your .vmt if you're using an UnlitGeneric
on a model, otherwise the surface may not show up.Minimum Light Level values
This is not strictly a glowing texture per se, but another way that a texture can be made to appear to glow (without shedding any actual light) is by placing it on a surface that allows you to set the Minimum Light Level float value to control the minimum amount of ambient light the surface will reflect. The most common of these is func_brush. Setting the Minimum Light Level high (from 5 to 50 or more, depending on how light the texture is) will result in the textures on the brush glowing brightly.

Use of info_lighting
Models and prop_static entities can be made to glow brightly (though they do not actually emit any light) if their lighting origin key value is set to the name of an info_lighting
that is placed in a lightbox isolated from the rest of the map. In the illustration below, the model to the right has been linked to an info_lighting
placed in a small hollow cube with nine light entities, each set to a brightness of 5000.
One possibly useful feature of this method of manipulating lighting is that it dynamically updates in real time. That is, if the lights in the lightbox are linked to a switch or trigger, or pre-set to pulse, flicker, or so on, the lighting on the model or prop_static
will reflect these changes immediately. This might be used, for instance, to slowly darken modeled terrain to simulate the coming of evening.