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If you learned C4D after 2019, you probably take the current node-based workflow for granted. But for those of us who lived through the transition, R20 was the moment the software grew up. Cinema 4D R20
It gave us and Nodes —two tools that every serious motion designer now uses daily. If you are an intermediate user looking to understand why C4D works the way it does today, look back at the R20 release notes. That was the turning point. Did you learn C4D during the R20 era? Or are you a new user trying to decipher old tutorials? Let us know in the comments below! Published by [Your Name/Company] If you learned C4D
Suddenly, artists had unlimited complexity. You could build a single material that combined noises, gradients, filters, and math—without a single layer stack getting in your way. It was intimidating for traditionalists, but for tech-artists, it was heaven. If you are an intermediate user looking to
Back in 2018, Maxon released . While it might feel like ancient history in software terms (we are several major releases beyond it now), looking back, R20 wasn't just another incremental update. It was a paradigm shift.
R20 introduced the .
Let’s rewind and look at why Cinema 4D R20 still matters to how we work today. Before R20, if you wanted to build complex materials, you were mostly stuck with the classic layer-based shader system. It worked, but it was linear and limiting.
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