VMT

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Todo: Move engine-agnostic stuff to material.

A VMT ("Valve Material") file defines the material used by a two-dimensional surface. It contains all of the information needed for Source Source to simulate the surface visually, aurally, and physically.
If a material is missing, it will produce the infamous Source pink and black checkered pattern. A white wireframe is not a missing material, but instead a missing shader.


The contents of a material will fall into some or all of these categories:

  1. Texture names
  2. Physical surface types
  3. Shader parameters
  4. Special compile properties
  5. Fallbacks
  6. Proxies

A simple example

LightmappedGeneric { $basetexture coast\shingle_01 $surfaceprop gravel }

This is a very basic shingle beach material.

  1. The LightmappedGeneric shader is used, which means that the material is for use on surfaces with lightmaps (i.e. brushes).
  2. The { character opens a set of parameters
  3. The $basetexture parameter is given with coast\shingle_01, which is the location of a texture. This is what will be drawn on the screen.
  4. $surfaceprop gives the material the physical properties of gravel.
  5. The } character closes a set of parameters

It's important to remember that this material can only be used on brushes. If it needed to be used on models, for instance, another version would need to be created using the VertexLitGeneric shader.

Most of the time switching materials from one shader to another is as simple as changing their first line, since a great number of parameters are shared between them. Some params only work with certain shaders, like Phong effects, which are only available with VertexLitGeneric, but unfortunately you won't encounter any critical errors if a param isn't understood by the shader. It just won't have any effect.

Tip.pngTip:If you ever need to use a space or tab character in a parameter value, you must wrap the whole value with "quote marks". You'll often see absolutely everything wrapped like this - save yourself some typing, as that's unnecessary.

Finding materials

SteamPipe

When Valve updated all Source Source games to SteamPipe, all materials were moved from GCF into VPK files. Third-party games (running on Source 2004 - Source 2009) that previously used GCF files are also having it's materials moved to depot VPK files. VPK Files work with GCFScape GCFScape and VPKEdit VPKEdit.

More info on SteamPipe here

Non-SteamPipe Games

In non SteamPipe Source Source games, Materials are stored in the 🖿materials\ folder of your game or mod. The best way to browse them is from Hammer Hammer's texture selection screen.

If you want to edit or view the code of Valve's material files you will first need to extract them from their GCF package with GCFScape GCFScape. They tend to be stored in GCFs with 'materials' in their name.

See also