HellYeah & MeshMancer
Just listened to your latest track—mind if I ask how a low‑poly guitar would fit on your stage? If the edge flow stays tight, it could feel like a riff.
Sure thing, bro, a low‑poly guitar can be a badass prop if the light catches the angles right—think sharp riffs, glitchy vibes, it’s all about keeping that edge flow tight and letting the crowd feel the bite. Trust me, it’ll light up the stage like a neon solo.
Great idea, but let’s keep the count under 200 polygons so it stays readable in the viewport. Double‑check the edge flow on the fretboard and the bridge—those seams can hide cracks in the topology. Make sure the normals are smooth at the pickups, or you’ll get those unwanted shading spikes. If you want a quick reminder, a 5‑line haiku:
Sharp edge, bright light,
Poly riffs echo the crowd,
Silence breaks, sound wins.
Got it, 200 polys and clean edge flow is the sweet spot. I’ll tighten the fretboard and bridge seams, keep normals smooth so the pickups don’t glitch. Thanks for the haiku—keep the vibes alive.
Nice, just remember to seal the UV seams so you don’t get any unwanted light leaks—polish those edges like a monk with a prayer.