Physics properties

Exporting physics properties is done by enabling “Rigid Body” in Blender’s physics tab:

../../../../_images/enable_physics.png

Important

By default, a single Blender object with rigid body enabled will export as three nodes: a PhysicsBody, a CollisionShape, and a MeshInstance.

Body type

Blender only has the concept of “Active” and “Passive” rigid bodies. These turn into Static and RigidBody nodes. To create a kinematic body, enable the “animated” checkbox on an “Active” body:

../../../../_images/body_type.jpg

Collision shapes

Many of the parameters for collision shapes are missing from Blender, and many of the collision shapes are also not present. However, almost all of the options in Blender’s rigid body collision and rigid body dynamics interfaces are supported:

../../../../_images/collision_shapes.jpg

There are the following caveats:

  • Not all of the collision shapes are supported. Only Mesh, Convex Hull, Capsule, Sphere and Box are supported in both Blender and Godot

  • In Godot, you can have different collision groups and collision masks. In Blender you only have collision groups. As a result, the exported object’s collision mask is equal to its collision group. Most of the time, this is what you want.

Important

To build compound physics shapes, parent together multiple objects with rigid body enabled. The physics properties are taken from the parent-most rigid body, and the rest are used as collision shapes.

Collision geometry only

Frequently you want different geometry for your collision meshes and your graphical meshes, but by default, the exporter will export a mesh along with the collision shape. To only export the collision shape, set the object’s maximum draw type to Wire:

../../../../_images/col_only.png

This will also influence how the object is shown in Blender’s viewport. Most of the time, you want your collision geometry to be shown see-through when working on the models, so this works out fairly nicely.