Most of these are listed in the “fun” category and so can be screened out relatively easily. My only real criticism is the quantity of useless tools designed by geeks with too much time on their hands. There’s even been some effort made toward vetting the compatibility of content with your current version of Resolve/Fusion (though I’ve found this to be pretty hit-and-miss). Still others add functionality found in Nuke (the industry standard node-based compositor), like the Switch and Grade nodes.Īll in all, it’s a very well-designed plugin manager. Other tools correct frustrating “quirks” in Fusion (like the fact that you can’t set a tracking reference frame independent of the frame where tracking began). You’ll find everything from vector paint tools (like the ones in Nuke and Flame) to custom viewer LUTs like super-white float value indicators. Reactor installs as a script into Resolve (or Fusion Studio) and provides a simple interface for loading and unloading the latest versions of various user-generated scripts and plugins. Wouldn’t it be great to have access to all those plugins right inside Fusion itself? That’s where Reactor comes in. ![]() ![]() Those same artists often share these user-generated tools online. ![]() Reactor is a plugin manager for Blackmagic Fusion that adds powerful new tools to both the Fusion page in Resolve and the standalone version of Fusion, Fusion Studio.Īrtists in applications like After Effects tend to invest in third party plugins to enhance their workflow, but node-based compositing artists more often just “roll their own,” simply because it’s easier to do in nodal apps.
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