Comparing this to a "traditional" type education, saying you pour your heart, soul, and mind into your work... 216 a year is a steal. You can go from complete newb status to creating full blown, game ready art in less than a year at a junior level. Say you went through university, you are looking at like 10grand worth…
I don't know. I feel like Digital Tutors as a whole isn't very good. It seems like maybe 10% of their tutorials are any good, with like 90% noise. I prefer 3dmotive, eat3d, gnomon, etc. It seems like while they don't have like a huge amount of content, the stuff they do have is excellent. My general rule of thumb is to…
I followed the old car tutorial back in my last year of college, and honestly learned more about modelling from that tutorial then I did the 3 years I was at school... given college covered the bases so parts of the tutorial were old news for me but it also showed me tools in maya I knew nothing about and different…
It's decent for beginners to get a grasp of the basics with many different pieces of software. Terrible for advanced stuff though. The official tutors aren't skilled enough in their work to give good advice on advanced techniques and processes, and the videos tend to avoid such topics all together. Even in the basic stuff…
They have very nice beginner to intermediate tutorials, and some good intermediate and advanced tutorials. It totally worth £216 a year. You can definitely find decent tutorials at Youtube, but you've got to swim through countless outdated and shitty videos in order to gather enough good ones. At the end of the day you…
I love their stuff and I find it worth the money. The tutorials are professional and they cover a lot of different apps... EDIT : Oh, and they just merged with another tutorial place that does nothing but programming languages so there's that. I forget the name now ...
I probably need to re-look at that.. damn. Oh yeah, im an idiot :D I didn't see the 'per month' part.. It seemed worth it for £18 a year, but I don't think 216 a year is worth it. Ill stick with Youtube videos :D Anyone know any good, free/cheap places for good tutorials? I can't find any decent tutorials for sculpted…
It's awesome for getting a grasp on something that you know little to nothing about, such as a new software, or say rigging a quadruped. Some of the tutorials are really long and drawn out, which can make it hard to sit though. Overall, I think DT is a great learning resource.