3D rendering limitations
In addition to the limitations below, mobile platforms have even more limitations on 3D rendering compared to desktop platforms. See Mobile rendering limitations for more information.
Due to their focus on performance, real-time rendering engines have many limitations. Godot’s renderer is no exception. To work effectively with those limitations, you need to understand them.
Texture size limits
On desktops and laptops, textures larger than 8192×8192 may not be supported on older devices. You can check your target GPU’s limitations on .
Mobile GPUs are typically limited to 4096×4096 textures. Also, some mobile GPUs don’t support repeating non-power-of-two-sized textures. Therefore, if you want your texture to display correctly on all platforms, you should avoid using textures larger than 4096×4096 and use a power of two size if the texture needs to repeat.
When using the GLES3 or Vulkan renderers, Godot’s 3D engine renders internally in HDR. However, the rendering output will be tonemapped to a low dynamic range so it can be displayed on the screen. This can result in visible banding, especially when using untextured materials. This can also be seen in 2D projects when using smooth gradient textures.
There are two main ways to alleviate banding:
Enable Use Debanding in the Project Settings. This applies a fullscreen debanding shader as a post-processing effect and is very cheap. Fullscreen debanding is only supported when using the GLES3 or Vulkan renderers. It also requires HDR to be enabled in the Project Settings (which is the default).
Alternatively, bake some noise into your textures. This is mainly effective in 2D, e.g. for vignetting effects. In 3D, you can also use a to be applied on your materials. This technique works even if your project is rendered in LDR, which means it will work when using the GLES2 renderer.
See Banding in Games: A Noisy Rant for more details about banding and ways to combat it.
Depth buffer precision
To sort objects in 3D space, rendering engines rely on a depth buffer (also called Z-buffer). This buffer has a finite precision: 24-bit on desktop platforms, sometimes 16-bit on mobile platforms (for performance reasons). If two different objects end up on the same buffer value, then Z-fighting will occur. This will materialize as textures flickering back and forth as the camera moves or rotates.
To make the depth buffer more precise over the rendered area, you should increase the Camera node’s Near property. However, be careful: if you set it too high, players will be able to see through nearby geometry. You should also decrease the Camera node’s Far property to the lowest permissible value for your use case, though keep in mind it won’t impact precision as much as the Near property.
If you only need high precision when the player can see far away, you could change it dynamically based on the game conditions. For instance, if the player enters an airplane, the Near property can be temporarily increased to avoid Z-fighting in the distance. It can then be decreased once the player leaves the airplane.
Depending on the scene and viewing conditions, you may also be able to move the Z-fighting objects further apart without the difference being visible to the player.
In Godot, transparent materials are drawn after opaque materials. Transparent objects are sorted back to front before being drawn based on the Spatial’s position, not the vertex position in world space. Due to this, overlapping objects may often be sorted out of order. To fix improperly sorted objects, tweak the material’s property. This will force specific materials to appear in front or behind of other transparent materials. Even then, this may not always be sufficient.
Some rendering engines feature order-independent transparency techniques to alleviate this, but this is costly on the GPU. Godot currently doesn’t provide this feature. There are still several ways to avoid this problem:
Only make materials transparent if you actually need it. If a material only has a small transparent part, consider splitting it into a separate material. This will allow the opaque part to cast shadows and may also improve performance.
If you need to render semi-transparent areas of the texture, alpha scissor isn’t suitable. Instead, setting the SpatialMaterial’s Parameters > Depth Draw Mode property to Opaque Pre-Pass can sometimes work (at a performance cost).
Multi-sample antialiasing
Multi-sample antialiasing (MSAA) takes multiple coverage samples at the edges of polygons when rendering objects. It does not increase the number of color samples used to render a scene. Here’s what this means in practice:
Edges of meshes will be smoothed out nicely (as well as supersampling would).
Transparent materials that use alpha testing (1-bit transparency) won’t be smoothed out.
Specular aliasing (“sparkles” that appear on reflective surfaces) won’t be reduced.
There are several ways to work around this limitation depending on your performance budget:
To make specular aliasing less noticeable, open the Project Settings and enable Rendering > Quality > Screen Space Filters > Screen Space Roughness Limiter. This filter has a moderate cost on performance. It should be enabled only if you actually need it.