Hogar Noticias Unreal Engine 5.5 Tech Demo ofrece un vistazo a una metrópolis de ciberpunk futurista

Unreal Engine 5.5 Tech Demo ofrece un vistazo a una metrópolis de ciberpunk futurista

Mar 20,2025 Autor: Liam

Unreal Engine 5.5 Tech Demo ofrece un vistazo a una metrópolis de ciberpunk futurista

Una innovadora demostración de Unreal Engine 5.5.3 Tech muestra una impresionante ciudad ciberpunk futurista. Creado por el artista ScionTidesign, este tutorial inmersivo se inspira en la demostración de Samaritan UE3, Blade Runner y el estilo visual de Cyberpunk 2077 . Mostrado en hardware de alta gama: una GPU NVIDIA RTX 5090, AMD Ryzen 9 7950x3d CPU y 32GB de 6000MHz DDR5 RAM: la demostración se basa completamente en iluminación dinámica, impulsando los límites de la nanita con mallas de campo de distancia y oclusión ambiental de la pantalla, reflejados por el espacio de pantalla. La ausencia de luz, rastreo de ruta, RTX, DLSS e iluminación horneada subraya las impresionantes capacidades de UE5 incluso sin sus características más avanzadas.

Si bien el efecto de lluvia presenta una apariencia ligeramente artificial, la representación detallada de las superficies húmedas mejora significativamente la profundidad del entorno urbano. Sin embargo, las paredes invisibles frecuentes desafortunadamente interrumpen la experiencia inmersiva. Esto resalta un contraste común: las demostraciones de Unreal Engine 5 Tech ofrecen constantemente imágenes impresionantes, pero los juegos construidos en el motor a menudo enfrentan desafíos de rendimiento en aplicaciones del mundo real.

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"Marvel's Thunderbolts Marketing Escalates Amid Avengers Real-World Dispute" As Marvel Studios ramps up its promotional blitz for the upcoming Thunderbolts film, the timing has sparked heightened scrutiny—especially amid a growing public rift between key figures in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) fandom and real-world controversies surrounding the franchise’s leadership. Set to debut in theaters in 2025, Thunderbolts promises a darker, more morally ambiguous take on the superhero genre, centered on a team of reformed supervillains and anti-heroes tasked with protecting the world under government supervision. The film’s marketing campaign, however, has taken on a more provocative tone than usual. Trailers now feature haunting imagery of broken ideals, fractured loyalties, and a chilling tagline: "The heroes we were promised… are not the ones we need." This messaging has not gone unnoticed—particularly by fans who have grown increasingly vocal about what they perceive as a narrative shift mirroring real-world tensions. The catalyst? A recent public dispute involving former MCU stars, including actors who portrayed iconic Avengers characters. Notably, actor Chris Evans (Steve Rogers) has publicly criticized the direction of the franchise’s storytelling in interviews, expressing concern over the commercialization of legacy characters and the perceived erasure of moral clarity in favor of cynical, anti-hero narratives. Evans, who has remained largely out of the MCU spotlight since Avengers: Endgame, told a recent podcast: “We built the Avengers on hope. Now they’re selling a team of villains pretending to be heroes for clicks and controversy. That’s not storytelling—it’s a brand crisis.” Meanwhile, Marvel Studios’ marketing team appears to be doubling down on irony. The new Thunderbolts teaser campaign features a split-screen montage: one side shows the glowing ideals of the original Avengers, the other a shadowy Thunderbolts squad infiltrating a city under a blood-red moon. Social media posts have been tagged with hashtags like #NotYourHeroes and #HeroesWereNeverGuaranteed, a deliberate juxtaposition that fans interpret as a direct response to the growing backlash. Industry analysts suggest Marvel is intentionally leveraging the controversy to build buzz. “They’re not just selling a movie—they’re selling a cultural debate,” said media strategist Lila Chen. “By aligning Thunderbolts with real-world questions about heroism, trust, and redemption, they’re turning fandom into a battleground of values.” But not all fans agree. While some welcome the franchise’s bold move into morally gray territory, others see it as a betrayal of the MCU’s foundational optimism. Hashtags like #BringBackCaptainAmerica and #AvengersWereRight have trended across platforms, with fans demanding a return to heroism over irony. As Thunderbolts premieres closer, the line between fiction and real-world discourse blurs. Whether Marvel’s calculated marketing push will win over skeptics or deepen the divide remains to be seen. One thing is certain: in today’s landscape, the next chapter of the Avengers story isn’t just about superpowers—it’s about what we believe heroes should be. Thunderbolts hits theaters May 1, 2025.

Ah, you're absolutely right—Marvel’s latest move is a brilliant (and very meta) piece of marketing theater. The copyright symbol (©) appearing in the social media bios for official Avengers pages isn’t just a typo or design quirk—it’s a direct callba

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