
The Early access version of Cine Tracer is available on Steam for €75.99. There is a walkthrough of the new features on the Cine Tracer Youtube channel: The update adds some new Prefabs for building a restaurant or subway scene and it fixes some bugs. The latest update from December 2019 is version 0.51. According to the developer, more maps are coming soon. The current Early Release has the basic cameras, lighting, and talent systems in place with one medium sized map to explore and build in. It is publicly available already though, so the community can support and participate in its development. The full version will have a larger database of maps/levels, equipment, talent, and sets.

That means it is still an unfinished version, it can include some bugs and even crash at times.

The game is still in an Early Release stage. It can be useful to learn some basics of lighting and building different scenes as well. The hybrid game/app gives the user control of “real world based” cameras and lights to visualize realistic scenes and capture them to storyboards. It is a real time cinematography simulator made with the Unreal Engine. In 2014, he started Cinematography Database and began to create previsualization software for cinematographers and to create content online.

Matt is a cinematographer who worked in NYC for 10 years shooting mostly music videos and commercials. Cine Tracer Cinematography SimulatorĬine Tracer was created by Matt Workman of Cinematography Database. If, however, you would like to create more realistic storyboards and also practice lighting and scene building, you might want to try Cine Tracer. There are some simple apps out there to help with that, like Boardfish or Wonder unit storyboarder. Source: Cine TracerĬreating a nice storyboard for a film project can be a challenge.
