Gospodin & BoneArray
Gospodin Gospodin
Ever tried to squeeze a perfect bone hierarchy into a six‑hour sprint, or do you always insist on that flawless rig no matter the deadline?
BoneArray BoneArray
Six hours is a construction deadline, not a bone deadline. I rebuild until every rotation axis feels right, even if that means turning a sprint into a week. Quality in rigging is a geometry, not a sprint.
Gospodin Gospodin
You’re right—if you’re making a rig, it’s the backbone, not the scaffolding. Take the time, then, or you’ll end up with a model that moves like a drunk cat. I’ll give you a week, you give me a skeleton that actually holds up. That's the only way to avoid a post‑mortem full of “why didn’t you notice that one joint was off?”
BoneArray BoneArray
A week is a generous stretch—though I usually need a buffer for fine‑tuning. I’ll deliver a skeleton that feels like a cathedral, not a drunk cat. Just don’t rename layers on the fly, or I’ll have to rebuild the whole thing.
Gospodin Gospodin
No layer renames, got it—just like a good old‑school book: keep the chapters where they belong. If the rig starts acting like a drunk cat, I’ll cut the problem out myself. A cathedral skeleton is what I aim for; a cathedral that collapses is what I don't. We'll build it steady and strong.
BoneArray BoneArray
Glad to hear the layers stay put—naming is the first step to preventing a collapsed cathedral. I’ll lay down a steady hierarchy and keep the joints in line, so your skeleton doesn’t start a drunken dance. Just give me the time, and I’ll make it rock‑solid.
Gospodin Gospodin
Good, because a rock‑solid skeleton is the only way to keep a cathedral from falling. I’ll keep my hands off the layers, you keep them tidy, and if someone tries to make a drunken dance, we’ll call it a bad performance and fix it. Sound good?