Daz 3D

Daz Productions, Inc. (commonly known as Daz 3D, stylized Daz3D or DAZ 3D in some logos) is a 3D-content and software company specializing in providing rigged 3D human models, associated accessory content, and software to the hobbyist as well as the prosumer market. Originally a part of Zygote Media Group, a general purpose, application-agnostic broker of 3D content, Daz 3D split off as Digital Art Zone[1] in 2000[2] to focus on supplying content for the Poser market. The company no longer uses that name, and does not treat "Daz" as an acronym for it.[3]

Daz Productions, Inc
Software and Content Developer
FoundedUtah (2000 (2000))
FounderDan Farr 
HeadquartersSalt Lake City, Utah, United States
Websitedaz3d.com

Daz 3D continue to focus on 3D-content development, but also began to expand their own software offerings as well, with purchases of several notable 3D applications:

Additionally, Daz 3D developed their own scene creator software, Daz Studio,[7] as an alternative to Poser.[8]

In 2016, Daz 3D spun off Tafi, a 3D-content company intended to focus more on the game-developer market.[9]

Free 3D software

In 2012, Daz 3D shifted their strategy from selling 3D software and content to one of giving the software away for free[10] and focusing more on the selling of the content. This began with offering Daz Studio for free in 2012, which gave customers the ability to render images and video, and expanded in 2017 when Daz 3D added Hexagon to the list of their free software products and added the ability to do 3D modeling to that mix.

Figure technology

Daz 3D has had many versions of its human figures and characters, but in 2011 they launched a significant change in the underlying technology. Instead of each figure being designed individually, Daz 3D moved to their Genesis platform, in which figures were derived as morphs from the base mesh. Two of the key differences that this technology created were: the ability for characters to be blended into a huge variety of shapes; and, since these shapes were all derived from a common base, add-on content like clothing, hair, and additional morphs would not only work on all characters, but could actually change with the characters.[11]

The Genesis platform has gone through several versions since the launch in 2011:

Genesis 2

One of the shortcomings of the Genesis platform was that although it allowed extremely flexibility in the shape of characters and clothing, it also toned down some of the elements of what made a male or female figure unique. Genesis 2, released in 2013,[12] changed this by splitting the Genesis base figure into two separate base figures: Genesis 2 Male and Genesis 2 Female.

Genesis 3

Up until Genesis 3 the Genesis figures had been using TriAx Weight Maps, where many other industry platforms were using Dual Quaternion. This changed in Genesis 3, released in 2015,[13] to allow Daz 3D figures to be more compatible with other 3D software platforms as well as Game Development platforms.

Genesis 8

The jump in version naming from Genesis 3 to Genesis 8 was in order to address confusion in naming conventions. Although Genesis had reached its fourth version, most of the Daz 3D flagship characters were now on their eight versions. In order to avoid the confusion of Victoria 8 or Michael 8 being Genesis 4 characters, Daz 3D shifted the versioning of Genesis to match with the character versions.

Genesis 8 also included significant changes, including joint and muscle bends and flexing, and facial expressions. This resulted in reduced backward compatibility with previous generations' figures and their content.[14]

gollark: Oops again.
gollark: Oh no.
gollark: You know, there was something like a 1/5 chance of heavpoot succeeding in his roll to destroy the sun, I think.
gollark: But, canonically, you could have an "electric car" powered by a magic field generator and some electricity.
gollark: And generators are basically the same principle as electric motors.

References

  1. Harvey, Tom (March 28, 2012). "Utah company counts on big giveaway to boost bottom line". The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved August 18, 2017.
  2. "Daz 3D Company Profile: Valuation & Investors". Pitchbook.com. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
  3. "Daz 3D [homepage]". Daz3D.com. Daz 3D. 2020. Copyright notice. Retrieved May 1, 2020. Daz Productions, Inc., dba Daz 3D. Daz is a Registered Trademark of Daz Productions, Inc.
  4. "DAZ acquires Bryce from Corel". Retrieved 2018-01-29.
  5. "DAZ Productions Acquires Eovia US Corp.: Deal Bolsters DAZ's Commitment to High-quality, Affordable 3D Solutions and Ensures Solid Future for Eovia's Widely Acclaimed Software". Retrieved 2018-01-29.
  6. "DAZ acquires Carrara maker Eovia Corp". Macworld. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
  7. "DAZ Studio". PCWorld. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
  8. "Daz3d Studio Pro Review". NativeTelecom. 2018-01-18. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
  9. "Reality Revolution: Virtual reality is ready to take Utahns to new landscapes". UtahBusiness.com. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
  10. "Utah company counts on big giveaway to boost bottom line". The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
  11. "Daz 3D introduces Genesis technology for 3D human models". GfxSpeak.com. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
  12. "Victoria 6". Daz 3D. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  13. "DAZ 3D Announces Launch of Victoria 7" (Press release). Salt Lake City, Utah: Daz 3D. PRWeb. 23 June 2015. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
  14. "Review: Daz 3D's Victoria 8". DigiSprawl. 2017-06-20. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
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