I’ve just started into a pixel art journey for a game I’m making, currently using LibreSprite. This looks like it’s going to be that on steroids, am I right? I’m guessing that what I lose in simplicity I gain in toolset power?
I’m not familiar with libre sprite, but I will say this editor has a pretty simple baseline, at least for now. Progressive enhancement
https://graphite.rs/ is the one I’m really waiting for, but this looks nice, especially for game developers.
That is way too much scope but looks awesome
Yes, it does seem overambitious, but I’d be happy if I can just replace Illustrator finally.
I have been using inkscape for vector graphics since more than ten years. It is FOSS and does everything I expect.
That’s great, I’m glad you’ve found something that fits your requirements! Some of us need features it doesn’t have, like the ability to adjust spacing between paragraphs (or rather, to have paragraphs at all rather than just add line breaks)
Have you tried scribus?
You are right, I don’t use it for text. Is that something illustrator does? Coming from inkscape I missed a lot of features in illustrator (university pays for the license). And as I stopped using After Effects the only reason to use it was gone.
Wonderful project!
Graphite is also super interesting, but every time I’ve used the raster (brush) tool, it’s been unusably laggy. Idk if that’s the web stack or something else, but if they can improve it, I’d def want to try again
Thank God I can’t wait to try this out. I need another raster based graphics editor other than Krita and Gimp
Interesting. I’ve gotten OK working in Krtia, but I feel like I’m working around its UI since I’m not using it as the drawing tool it’s meant to be.
God almighty, how come I’m hearing about this for the first time??? this thing basically does everything GIMP does but better. I mean, node-based editor… are you kidding me, it’s incredible!
after a couple of hours of playing, their node editor is still a bit raw (not blender level), but the foundation is very solid. i’m willing to back this project financially (after I use it for a week or so), and I strongly suggest you do too (if you find it similarly useful). we really need more projects like this so that (a) people stop using adobe, and (b) GIMP devs finally realise that to maintain the audience they actually have to do something.
Supporting apps out of sheer spite for gimp is certainly one business model
I call it motivation ( : I mean no offense to GIMP, they’re definitely the ones who broke the monopoly originally. but since the time I started using it like 10 years ago to now with the release of GIMP 3 barely anything has changed, yet there already are quite a few open source alternatives that shine brighter at very specific niches.






