AnimationTree
Introduction
With AnimationPlayer, Godot has one of the most flexible animation systems that you can find in any game engine. The ability to animate pretty much any property in any node or resource, as well as having dedicated transform, bezier, function calling, audio and sub-animation tracks, is pretty much unique.
However, the support for blending those animations via AnimationPlayer
is relatively limited, as only a fixed cross-fade transition time can be set.
AnimationTree is a new node introduced in Godot 3.1 to deal with advanced transitions. It supersedes the ancient AnimationTreePlayer
, while adding a huge amount of features and flexibility.
Creating an AnimationTree
Before starting, it must be made clear that an AnimationTree
node does not contain its own animations. Instead, it uses animations contained in an AnimationPlayer
node. This way, you can edit your animations (or import them from a 3D scene) as usual and then use this extra node to control the playback.
The most common way to use AnimationTree
is in a 3D scene. When importing your scenes from a 3D exchange format, they will usually come with animations built-in (either multiple ones or split from a large one on import). At the end, the imported Godot scene will contain the animations in a AnimationPlayer
node.
As you rarely use imported scenes directly in Godot (they are either instantiated or inherited from), you can place the AnimationTree
node in your new scene which contains the imported one. Afterwards, point the AnimationTree
node to the AnimationPlayer
that was created in the imported scene.
This is how it’s done in the Third Person Shooter demo, for reference:
A new scene was created for the player with a KinematicBody
as root. Inside this scene, the original .dae
(Collada) file was instantiated and an AnimationTree
node was created.
Creating a tree
There are three main types of nodes that can be used in AnimationTree
:
- Animation nodes, which reference an animation from the linked
AnimationTree
. - Animation Root nodes, which are used to blend sub-nodes.
- Animation Blend nodes, which are used within
AnimationNodeBlendTree
as single-graph blending via multiple input ports.
To set a root node in AnimationTree
, a few types are available:
AnimationNodeAnimation
: Selects an animation from the list and plays it. This is the simplest root node, and generally not used directly as root.AnimationNodeBlendTree
: Contains many blend type nodes, such as mix, blend2, blend3, one shot, etc. This is one of the most commonly used roots.AnimationNodeStateMachine
: Contains multiple root nodes as children in a graph. Each node is used as a state, and provides multiple functions to alternate between states.AnimationNodeBlendSpace2D
: Allows placing root nodes in a 2D blend space. Control the blend position in 2D to mix between multiple animations.AnimationNodeBlendSpace1D
: Simplified version of the above (1D).
Blend tree
An AnimationNodeBlendTree
can contain both root and regular nodes used for blending. Nodes are added to the graph from a menu:
All blend trees contain an Output
node by default, and something has to be connected to it in order for animations to play.
The easiest way to test this functionality is to connect an Animation
node to it directly:
This will simply play back the animation. Make sure that the AnimationTree
is active for something to actually happen.
Following is a short description of available nodes:
Blend2 / Blend3
These nodes will blend between two or three inputs by a user-specified blend value:
For more complex blending, it is advised to use blend spaces instead.
Blending can also use filters, i.e. you can control individually which tracks go through the blend function. This is very useful for layering animations on top of each other.
OneShot
This node will execute a sub-animation and return once it finishes. Blend times for fading in and out can be customized, as well as filters.
Seek
This node can be used to cause a seek command to happen to any sub-children of the graph. After setting the time, this value returns to -1.
TimeScale
Allows scaling the speed of the animation (or reverse it) in any children nodes. Setting it to 0 will pause the animation.
Transition
Very simple state machine (when you don’t want to cope with a StateMachine
node). Animations can be connected to the outputs and transition times can be specified.
BlendSpace2D
BlendSpace2D
is a node to do advanced blending in two dimensions. Points are added to a two-dimensional space and then a position can be controlled to determine blending:
The ranges in X and Y can be controlled (and labeled for convenience). By default, points can be placed anywhere (just right-click on the coordinate system or use the add point button) and triangles will be generated automatically using Delaunay.
It is also possible to draw the triangles manually by disabling the auto triangle option, though this is rarely necessary:
Finally, it is possible to change the blend mode. By default, blending happens by interpolating points inside the closest triangle. When dealing with 2D animations (frame by frame), you may want to switch to Discrete mode. Alternatively, if you want to keep the current play position when switching between discrete animations, there is a Carry mode. This mode can be changed in the Blend menu:
BlendSpace1D
This is similar to 2D blend spaces, but in one dimension (so triangles are not needed).
StateMachine
This node is a relatively simple state machine. Root nodes can be created and connected via lines. States are connected via Transitions, which are connections with special properties. Transitions are uni-directional, but two can be used to connect in both ways.
There are many types of transitions:
- Immediate: Will switch to the next state immediately. The current state will end and blend into the beginning of the new one.
- Sync: Will switch to the next state immediately, but will seek the new state to the playback position of the old state.
- At End: Will wait for the current state playback to end, then switch to the beginning of the next state animation.
Transitions also have a few properties. Click any transition and it will be displayed in the inspector dock:
- Switch Mode is the transition type (see above), it can be modified after creation here.
- Auto Advance will turn on the transition automatically when this state is reached. This works best with the At End switch mode.
- Advance Condition will turn on auto advance when this condition is set. This is a custom text field that can be filled with a variable name. The variable can be modified from code (more on this later).
- Xfade Time is the time to cross-fade between this state and the next.
- Priority is used together with the
travel()
function from code (more on this later). When travelling from a state to another, give more priority to this node. - Disabled allows to disable this transition (it will not be used during travel or auto advance).
Root motion
When working with 3D animations, a popular technique is for animators to use the root skeleton bone to give motion to the rest of the skeleton. This allows animating characters in a way where steps actually match the floor below. It also allows precise interaction with objects during cinematics.
When playing back the animation in Godot, it is possible to select this bone as the root motion track. Doing so will cancel the bone transformation visually (the animation will stay in place).
Afterwards, the actual motion can be retrieved via the AnimationTree API as a transform:
GDScript
C#
anim_tree.get_root_motion_transform()
animTree.GetRootMotionTransform();
This can be fed to functions such as KinematicBody.move_and_slide to control the character movement.
There is also a tool node, RootMotionView
, that can be placed in a scene and will act as a custom floor for your character and animations (this node is normally disabled during the game).
Controlling from code
After building the tree and previewing it, the only question remaining is “How is all this controlled from code?”.
Keep in mind that the animation nodes are just resources and, as such, they are shared between all the instances. Setting values in the nodes directly will affect all instances of the scene that uses this AnimationTree
. This has some cool use cases, though, e.g. you can copy and paste parts of your animation tree, or reuse nodes with a complex layout (such as a state machine or blend space) in different animation trees.
The actual animation data is contained in the AnimationTree
node and is accessed via properties. Check the “Parameters” section of the AnimationTree
node to see all the parameters that can be modified in real-time:
This is handy because it makes it possible to animate them from an AnimationPlayer
, or even the AnimationTree
itself, allowing the realization of very complex animation logic.
To modify these values from code, the property path must be obtained. This is done easily by hovering the mouse over any of the parameters:
Which allows setting them or reading them:
GDScript
C#
anim_tree.set("parameters/eye_blend/blend_amount", 1.0)
# Simpler alternative form:
anim_tree["parameters/eye_blend/blend_amount"] = 1.0
animTree.Set("parameters/eye_blend/blend_amount", 1.0);
State machine travel
One of the nice features in Godot’s StateMachine
implementation is the ability to travel. The graph can be instructed to go from the current state to another one, while visiting all the intermediate ones. This is done via the A* algorithm.
To use the travel ability, you should first retrieve the AnimationNodeStateMachinePlayback object from the AnimationTree
node (it is exported as a property).
GDScript
C#
var state_machine = anim_tree["parameters/playback"]
AnimationNodeStateMachinePlayback stateMachine = (AnimationNodeStateMachinePlayback)animTree.Get("parameters/playback");
Once retrieved, it can be used by calling one of the many functions it offers:
GDScript
C#
state_machine.travel("SomeState")
stateMachine.Travel("SomeState")