Difference between revisions of "N-World"

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*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRqCU44XL24 a video on youtube about the NBA Jam Extreme Source Code]
 
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRqCU44XL24 a video on youtube about the NBA Jam Extreme Source Code]
 
*[http://www.aaronjamesrogers.com/misc/nworld/N-World-Intro.html ''N-World'' 3.0 Online Documentation]
 
*[http://www.aaronjamesrogers.com/misc/nworld/N-World-Intro.html ''N-World'' 3.0 Online Documentation]
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[[Category:Development tools]]
 
[[Category:Development tools]]

Latest revision as of 04:44, 12 September 2023

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N-World Graphical User Interface.png

N-World
Developer:

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N-World is 3D Graphic Tools software package developed by Nichimen Graphics Inc in 1995[1] for Silicon Graphics and Windows NT workstations. Shortly after the establishment in Los Angeles, California the company ported Symbolics Genera[2] (initially for LISP[3] based Symbolic workstations[4]) to Silicon Graphics workstations, an operating system developed by now-defunct computer manufacturer Symbolics, Inc.[5] (one of the premier software development environments of the 1980s and 1990s), which was significantly enhanced to form Nichimen's flagship product, N-World.

The N-World Graphics package includes a polygon modeler (N-Geometry), an animation choreography utility (N-Dynamics), a fully-integrated 64-bit paint system (N-Paint), a toll to paint directly onto the surface of a 3D model (N-Paint 3D[6]) a skeletal animation utility (Skeletal Animation System), a photorealistic renderer (N-Render) and a module to send data and interactively preview content on the target system (Game Express/Saturn Express[7]).

The N-World software was discontinued in the year 1999 with the last stable version (version 3.2) released in January of that year, and substituted by another Nichimen's software called Mirai[8] (used in facial morph targets for the Gollum character in The Lord of the Rings film trilogy).

In 2017 a Silicon Graphics Indy workstation which belonged to Probe Software has surfaced in the internet, with what appears to be the source code for NBA Jam Extreme and a working copy of the N-World software (version 3.1b).

Games utilising N-World

Sega Saturn

External links

References