Beasts In The Sun -ep.1 Supporter V8- Animo Pro... [2021]

The sun-cat’s jaws closed on the ripper’s throat. Not a bite. An embrace. Heat poured off him in a corona, and the ripper screamed—a sound like a rockslide—before its legs buckled.

By the end of the 22-minute episode, Kaelen witnesses a celestial anomaly (the "Sun breaking its leash"), setting up a cosmic horror twist that few saw coming. The animation quality in the Supporter v8 version peaks during this sequence, where Animo Pro’s lighting effects create a solar eclipse that genuinely hurts to look at.

When Kaelen finally shares the Blue Water with Mira at the episode’s end, the way the liquid moves—animated via Animo Pro’s "Surface Tension" algorithm—looks more real than water in most live-action films. Beasts in the Sun -Ep.1 Supporter v8- Animo Pro...

Is Beasts in the Sun -Ep.1 Supporter v8- Animo Pro perfect? No. The voice acting is minimal (mostly growls and roars, with subtitles), and the pacing in the middle of the episode drags slightly as Kaelen wanders the salt flats.

At the end of the block, a child held a paper sun on a stick high above the crowd, watching the spectacle because that was what children did. The Beast’s attention flicked; its form elongated, threading between reflections to reach the small, bright thing. Mara moved. The sun-cat’s jaws closed on the ripper’s throat

(also known as Animopron) using Unreal Engine 4. Often described as a mature parody or homage to the Tomb Raider Lara Croft

Historically, high-quality 2D animation has been the barrier to entry for indie creators. Beasts in the Sun Ep.1 Supporter v8 proves that with tools like Animo Pro, a small team of five people can achieve studio-level kinetic action. Heat poured off him in a corona, and

Kael arrived to find chaos. The temple guards, clad in their gleaming ceremonial armor, were retreating in disarray. In the center of the courtyard, a creature of nightmare thrashed.