Home 3D news Blender 3.0 Likely Delayed 2 Months For Post-Lockdown Breather, Cycles X Might Land

Blender 3.0 Likely Delayed 2 Months For Post-Lockdown Breather, Cycles X Might Land

by Anne
Cycles X might land in time for the Blender 3.0 release in October.

Blender 3.0 is likely delayed 2 months for a post-lockdown breather, Cycles X might land in time for the Blender 3.0 release in October.

The wildly successful Blender 3D open-source modeling software has been working hard towards its Blender 3.0 release but will likely now be proactively delayed to allow developers more time to relax with COVID-19 lockdowns/restrictions loosening, the possibility of developer meetups pre-3.0, and letting more changes flow into this big feature release.

Blender Foundation chairman and CEO of the Blender Institute, Tom Roosendaal, shared that Blender 3.0 will likely be delayed by two months. Rather than trying to get Blender 3.0 in late summer, they now are going to try targeting late October.

With COVID-19 related restrictions loosening and more developers interested in meet-ups that can be

made in-person while Blender 3.0 is on the final stretch, the consensus among the core developers is to slide the release two months further out. This would also allow developers to be more relaxed and possibly holidays heading out of the pandemic.

The good news out of this is with such a delay, it’s likely the ongoing “Cycles X” work will hopefully land in time for the Blender 3.0 release in October. We’ll see what other features might manage to squeeze into this 3.0 release with the extra time.

Recently, Blender has released Blender 2.93 LTS introduces a new Spreadsheet Editor that promises to help you inspect your mesh, instances, and point clouds. It also introduces a new Fill tool, new Depth of Fiel, and new Eevee with faster volumetrics, as well as support for area lights and soft shadows.

About Blender

Blender is the free and open-source 3D creation suite. It supports the entirety of the 3D pipeline—modeling, rigging, animation, simulation, rendering, compositing and motion tracking, even video editing and game creation. Advanced users employ Blender’s API for Python scripting to customize the application and write specialized tools; often these are included in Blender’s future releases. Blender is well suited to individuals and small studios who benefit from its unified pipeline and responsive development process. Examples from many Blender-based projects are available in the showcase.

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