@rudenko_je Welcome to Polycount. Consider checking out the forum information and introduction thread. This thread has a lot of great resources so it's probably worth taking some time to skim through the recent posts and look for examples of how other artists have solved similar problems on other shapes. A couple of posts…
@tatertots You're welcome and thank you for sharing your results and followup questions. Example images in my previous post only show the initial block out, the final topology with a smoothing preview and the final subdivision model with a shiny material to highlight any artifacts. Only showing the starting and ending…
@Welcj When it comes to game art and high poly models for baking: there's few legitimate technical reason to extend all of the edge loops across the flat areas and into adjacent shapes. Most of the time it will just create unnecessary complexity that will make it harder to edit the mesh in the future. In general: it's…
@ConvexSurface Overall it looks like you have the right idea but sometimes connecting directly to a curve's existing polygon grid can cause a lot of smoothing issues. In these cases it's often better to place the intersecting geometry between the existing segments of the curved surface and use the existing curve geometry…
@rudenko_je Deciding whether or not certain smoothing artifacts are acceptable really depends on a couple of different factors: * Are the smoothing artifacts on a part of the model that's visible to the player under normal game play conditions? * Are the smoothing artifacts significant enough to still be noticeable when…
@MegaSofteae Creating a detailed outline of an object's profile can seem like a logical place to start but in most cases this limits the way you think about the shapes by constraining it to a 2D space. This is why it's generally considered best practice to block out all of the major features of an object in 3D before…