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Tech Soft 3D, the leading provider of engineering software development toolkits, today announces that Epic Games has chosen HOOPS Exchange to enable CAD data import into their solution, Datasmith, a collection of tools that allows Unreal Engine customers to import entire pre-constructed scenes or complex assets and assemblies from industry-standard design applications into Unreal Engine.
Although perhaps best known as the developer of the wildly popular online video game Fortnite, Epic Games is also the team behind Unreal Engine, a real-time 3D creation tool that powers the world’s leading games and has also been adopted across industries such as film and television, architecture, automotive, manufacturing, simulation, and other fields. With this expanded usage outside of the video game market, came increased challenges. Automotive or aerospace customers who wanted to use Unreal Engine found it challenging to actually get their data into Unreal Engine, because CAD data is created for manufacturing – it’s not created for interactive visualization.
To solve this problem, the company decided to build Datasmith, a collection of tools that allows Unreal Engine customers to import entire pre-constructed scenes or complex assets and assemblies from industry-standard design applications into Unreal Engine, making their workflows easier when it came to importing and preparing CAD data for visualization.
The company knew that beyond creating a streamlined pipeline for getting content into Unreal Engine, the success of the product would hinge on its ability to support the widest possible range of 3D design applications and file formats, given the extensive selection of applications in use by its customer base. This requirement made a compelling case for leveraging HOOPS Exchange on the back end of Datasmith.
Benchmarking Reveals the Best Choice
In earlier versions of Datasmith, which was first released in 2017, the company relied on a data translation SDK from a vendor other than Tech Soft 3D, because members of the team had used it in the past and were already familiar with it. For the most recent release of Datasmith, the Unreal Engine team took the time to fully benchmark a variety of SDKs to find the best one. As a result, they wound up switching out the CAD translation SDK they had previously been using in favor of HOOPS Exchange, an SDK that provides import of over 30 CAD formats – including CATIA®, SOLIDWORKS®, Inventor
New Workflows Simplified
The ability to easily bring in CAD data through Datasmith to Unreal Engine supports a variety of workflows for the company’s customers, in areas ranging from initial engineering efforts to marketing. Automotive companies, for instance, are able to bring in actual 3D CAD models and interact with them through virtual reality to perform an engineering review. Alternatively, they might bring in data to assist with design visualization or to get a head start on creating renderings and animations that can be used as marketing imagery.
The virtual workflows in particular have only become more essential over the past few years, as people have been forced to find new ways of working together in response to the disruption of the COVID-19 pandemic.
VR use cases especially gained in popularity during the pandemic. Teams who were working remotely – and oftentimes on different sides of the globe – had to find a way to collaborate on cars and aircraft and other complex projects. Now that those people are familiar with VR tools and have seen the value they provide, they might not want to go back to less immersive collaboration tools, like PowerPoint.
That pattern is good news for Unreal Engine, and, by extension, for Datasmith. As momentum continues to build, the company can focus on its core competencies as it moves forward, while leaving the CAD import to Tech Soft 3D.
HOOPS is a registered trademark of Tech Soft 3D. All other products or company references are the property of their respective holders.
About Tech Soft 3D
Tech Soft 3D is the leading provider of engineering software development toolkits. Established in 1996 and headquartered in Bend, Oregon, Tech Soft 3D also has offices in California, France, England, Japan and Norway. The company’s toolkit products power more than 500 unique applications running on hundreds of millions of computers worldwide. Tech Soft 3D is backed by investment firm Battery Ventures. For more information, visit www.techsoft3d.com.