Octane does not render correctly

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JoshNorman
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Joined: Fri Aug 31, 2018 12:09 am

I see, the image you are wondering about is a direct screen capture from a tutorial I am following along with. https://gumroad.com/juliengauthier#MSMRt

Looks like if I want the shadows on the object I will have to switch the kernel, I had already tried this but was wondering if it were possible with tracing (because it is the better render), it seems to not be the case though

At least I know now, thanks
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funk
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JoshNorman wrote:I see, the image you are wondering about is a direct screen capture from a tutorial I am following along with
Ah OK! This thread makes a lot more sense knowing that :)
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frankmci
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JoshNorman wrote:I see, the image you are wondering about is a direct screen capture from a tutorial I am following along with. https://gumroad.com/juliengauthier#MSMRt

Looks like if I want the shadows on the object I will have to switch the kernel, I had already tried this but was wondering if it were possible with tracing (because it is the better render), it seems to not be the case though

At least I know now, thanks
That's one of the downsides of an unbiased render. While you may like the look of the second render better, it is actually the less accurate of the two. The shadows you like are a result of the lack of light bouncing around the way it does in the real world. The Direct Lighting kernel does its best to fake that behavior with GI, which is a close enough in many situations, but not always. As Funk describes, he could get close to the look you like by reducing the number of diffuse ray bounces, which begins to approximate Direct Lighting.

It's funny how decades of extremely biased renderers have trained us to like/expect certain looks that are actually less accurate than the renderer creators would have prefered. :)
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