Navigate in the Scene Editor

BeginnerLevel designer

You can move around the scene and change the perspective of the editor camera. The XYZ axes in the bottom left show your orientation in 3D space.

Scene orientation gizmo

Move around in the scene

There are several ways to move the editor camera around the Scene Editor.

Tip

Holding the Shift key speeds up movement.

Fly

Hold the right mouse button and move the mouse to change the camera direction. Hold the right mouse button and use the WASD keys to move. This is similar to the controls of many action games.### PanHold the right mouse button and the center mouse button and move the mouse.

Dolly

To dolly (move the camera forward and backward), use the mouse wheel.

Orbit

Hold Alt and the left mouse button and move the mouse.

The point of rotation is always the center of the screen. To adjust the distance to the center, use the mouse wheel.

Rotation

Focus on an entity

After you select an entity, press the F key. This zooms in on the entity and centers it in the camera editor.

You can also focus by clicking the magnifying glass icon next to the entity in the Entity Tree.

Focus icon

Tip

Focusing and then orbiting with Alt + left mouse button is useful for inspecting entities.

Controls

ActionControl
MoveArrow keys + right mouse buttonWASDQE keys + right mouse button
Look aroundHold right mouse button + move mouse
PanMiddle mouse button + right mouse button + move mouse
OrbitAlt key + left mouse button
ZoomMouse wheelAlt + Right mouse button + move mouse
PanMiddle mouse button + move mouse
FocusF (with entity selected)
Tip

You can change the scene navigator controls in Edit > Settings under Scene Editor > Key bindings.Key bindings

Change camera editor perspective

You can change the camera editor perspective using the view camera gizmo in the top-right of the Scene Editor.

View camera gizmo

Snap camera to position

To change the angle of the editor camera, click the corresponding face, edge, or corner of the view camera gizmo.

ClickCamera position
FaceFaces the selected face
EdgeFaces the two adjacent faces at a 45° angle
CornerFaces the three adjacent faces at a 45° angle

Camera options

Note

This page explains how to use the Scene Editor camera. For information about how to use cameras in your game, see Graphics — Cameras.

To display the Scene Editor camera options, click the camera icon in the top-right of the Scene Editor.

Switch to orthographic

Perspective and orthographic views

Perspective view is a "real-world" perspective of the objects in your scene. In this view, objects close to the camera appear larger, and lines of identical lengths appear different due to foreshortening, as in reality.

In orthographic view, objects are always the same size, no matter how far their distance from the camera. Parallel lines never touch, and there's no vanishing point. It's easy to tell if objects are lined up exactly in orthographic view.

Perspective and orthographic diagram

Perspective and orthographic views

You can also switch between perspective and orthographic views by clicking the view camera gizmo as it faces you.

Field of view

You can change the camera field of view. This changes the camera frustum, and has the effect of zooming in and out of the scene. At high settings (90 and above), the field of view creates stretched "fish-eye lens" views. The default setting is 45.

Near and far planes

The near and far planes determine where the camera's view begins and ends.

  • The near plane is the closest point the camera can see. The default setting is 0.1. Objects before this point aren't drawn.

  • The far plane, also known as the draw distance, is the furthest point the camera can see. Objects beyond this point aren't drawn. The default setting is 1000.

Game Studio renders the area between the near and far planes.

Camera position

Camera speed

The camera speed setting changes how quickly the camera moves in the editor.

See also