MoCáp turns your iPhone and iPad into the motion capture studio. Rise your iPhone or iPad, point the camera toward a person, and start making your motion capture masterpiece.
MoCáp saves the motion data into a bvh file. You can then import it in your favourite 3D creation tool, like Cinema 4D, Maya/MotionBuilder, Blender, Poser, only to name a few, and apply the characters’ movements.
MoCáp uses the AR camera to detect a human body and record the movements in more than 20 joints in the skeleton. The conversion then takes part and translates the raw motion data into a single bvh file. The bvh file is the industry-standard motion capture file format compatible with the most main-stream 3D creation tools.
MoCáp integrates multiple functionalities to improve usability when you use it alone. And which is also the typical use case for indie artists. The countdown timer gives the user the time to set-up himself/herself in front of the camera before the recording starts. The sound effects for recorder status let the user know when a recording is going to start. MoCáp also delays the recording until the AR camera detects a human body. The Apple Watch version of the remoter is also under development.
MoCáp is free to download and has a single tier of Grande membership for professional function sets, such as framerate settings, motion file format options, full-access of whole recording history, etc. You can try the app without pressure, and it’s all your choice to pay for the app’s full functionality while giving me support.
I made two motion graphics as the banner design for the in-app purchase pages. I created them in Blender, and they are also my practice in trending 3D illustrations.
Apple Watch App Trailer
Apple Watch app as a remote controller for MoCáp is the ultimate solution for the solo usage case. I made the trailer video in Blender to advertise the coming new feature to the community.