$envmapmask

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Revision as of 10:20, 25 January 2009 by Craziestdan (talk | contribs)
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$envmapmask defines a specular mask, which affects how strongly each pixel of a material reflects light from the $envmap. The mask should be a greyscale image in which entirely reflective areas are white and entirely matte areas are black

Warning.pngWarning:$envmapmask will not work in model materials using $bumpmap. See #Alternative_methods.

VMT syntax example

$envmapmask <texture>
VertexLitGeneric
{
	$envmap			env_cubemap
	$envmapmask		"props/tvscreen_test"
}

Additional parameters

npc_cscanner's mask.
$envmapmasktransform <matrix>
Adjusts UV mapping of the specular mask.
DirectX 8 and below use $envmapmaskscale instead.


The default position is center .5 .5 scale 1 1 rotate 0 translate 0 0.
  1. center defines the point of rotation. Only useful if rotate is being used.
  2. scale fits the texture into the material the given number of times. 2 1 is a 50% scale in the horizontal X axis while the vertical Y axis is still at original scale.
  3. rotate rotates the texture counter-clockwise in degrees. Accepts any number, including negatives.
  4. translate shifts the texture by the given numbers. .5 will shift it half-way. 1 will shift it once completely over, which is the same as not moving it at all.
Note.pngNote:All values must be included!
Icon-Bug.pngBug:Scaling the texture may cause odd issues where the Texture Lock tool in Hammer will not actually lock the texture in place.  [todo tested in ?]
Icon-Bug.pngBug:Rotating textures applied on brushes will rotate around the map origin (confirm: Orangebox engine only?). A fix for this is to change the center position in the VMT to the brush's origin.  [todo tested in ?]
$envmapmaskscale <float>
Scales the specular mask by the given value.
See also $envmapmasktransform, above.
Requires DirectX 8.
$envmapmaskframe <integer>
The frame to start an animated specular mask on.

Alternative methods

Rather than creating a whole new texture just for a specular mask, you can use the alpha channel of either the $basetexture or $bumpmap. Note that this unfortunately won't reduce the overall amount of data on-disk or in-memory.

If you do use these commands, transformations and other such parameters applied to the base texture/bump map will also apply to the specular mask.

$basealphaenvmapmask <bool>
Use the alpha channel of $basetexture as the specular mask.
When putting your specular map in the alpha channel you will have to invert it, or else it will work the wrong way round.
$normalmapalphaenvmapmask <bool>
Use the alpha channel of $bumpmap as the specular mask.
This must be used if the model material has a bump map.

See Also