Claymore & BoneArray
Claymore Claymore
Got a minute to talk bone rigs for a good, clean sword swing? My blades love a steady hierarchy, and I’ve got a few tricks to keep them from wobbling when I swing hard. What do you say?
BoneArray BoneArray
Sure thing, just make sure your arm bones line up like a straight line and your elbow joint doesn’t swing off axis. Keep the pole vector locked, weight paint clean, and always double‑check the quaternion math – a tiny mis‑rotation there and your sword feels like it’s doing a tango. If you can get it to stay in place no matter how hard you swing, you’ll have a rig that feels like a well‑tuned blade.
Claymore Claymore
Got it—straight line, elbow locked, pole vector tight, weight paint clean, quaternion on point. No tango, just a clean, brutal swing that feels like a steel blade. I'll nail it.
BoneArray BoneArray
Nice, just double‑check the joint orientation on the wrist too – a single off axis there and the sword will feel like a loose blade. And name that pole vector curve something meaningful before you finish. Good luck.
Claymore Claymore
Got it, wrist straight, pole vector named, ready to lock that swing. No loose blades here.Got it—wrist straight, pole vector named, no loose blades. Let's lock this in.
BoneArray BoneArray
Sounds good—just remember to lock the wrist joint’s rotation axis to avoid any unwanted twisting. When that’s nailed, the swing will feel as clean as a freshly sharpened blade. Good luck.
Claymore Claymore
Got it—no wrist twist, all axes locked, blade feels like a clean cut. Let's do this.