Any 3d game is going to need lots of 3d assets. And in this section we're going to learn how you can get them sometimes off the web, or by creating your own using tools like blender. In this video, we're going to look at various different sites you can go to, to get assets either free or relatively low cost. turbosquid is one of the biggest asset resources going so if you look for game environments, you'll see that there's plenty of content available for you. So quite high cost some very low cost that give you everything you need for car racing game RAM, ultimo. Admittedly $200, but if that was what you needed is a low price to pay for all content.
The the asset we got to the game is came from Turbo squid. And it's all textures, all separate elements that we can combine. And it's pretty low poly, and it came in just under $30 which seems to be a bargain. Another great site for content is free 3d. And they've got plenty of assets available there. And another one that is sometimes useful is the Unity assets.
So this is a beautiful bit of bit of modeling So you gotta get an asset in unity as a unity package. So you need to have installed unity, and then use a plugin to export this as a bx. We'll be discussing different. We'll be discussing different file formats for 3d, in another video in this section. So you can see that it's all beautifully textured, low poly. And in this particular thing, there's loads of shader specific shaders that are developed specifically in unity, some of which were wouldn't come through the FX app, export.
Pit jams, got some lovely stuff. And the polygon adventure pack has got some some lovely assets of you doing something I would guess aimed at children. But it's got a really lovely style to it. You're looking for fairly funky stuff, then it's a great place to look. And just $20 Beautiful, beautiful stuff. Once you've got the assets, you'll get them in a variety of different formats.
And we're going to discuss how you'd handle these in another video in this section