Tutorial: Scripting Root Motion for “in-place” humanoid animations
Sometimes your animation comes as “in-place”, which means if you put it in a scene, it will not move the character that it’s on. In other words, the animation does not contain “root motion”. For this, we can modify root motion from script. To put everything together follow the steps below (note there are many variations of achieving the same result, this is just one recipe).
Open the inspector for the FBX file that contains the in-place animation, and go to the Animation tab
Make sure the Muscle Definition is set to the Avatar you intend to control (let’s say this avatar is called Dude, and it has already been added to the Hierarchy View).
Select the animation clip from the available clips
Make sure Loop Pose is properly aligned (the light next to it is green), and that the checkbox for Loop Pose is clicked
Preview the animation in the animation viewer to make sure the beginning and the end of the animation align smoothly, and that the character is moving “in-place”
On the animation clip create a curve that will control the speed of the character (you can add a curve from the Animation Import inspectorCurves-> +)
Name that curve something meaningful, like “Runspeed”
Create a new Animator Controller, (let’s call it RootMotionController)
Drop the desired animation clip into it, this should create a state with the name of the animation (say Run)
Add a parameter to the Controller with the same name as the curve (in this case, “Runspeed”)
Select the character Dude in the Hierarchy, whose inspector should already have an Animator component.
Drag RootMotionController onto the Controller property of the Animator
If you press play now, you should see the “Dude” running in place
Finally, to control the motion, we will need to create a script (RootMotionScript.cs), that implements the OnAnimatorMove callback:-
using UnityEngine;
using System.Collections;
[RequireComponent(typeof(Animator))]
public class RootMotionScript : MonoBehaviour {
void OnAnimatorMove()
{
Animator animator = GetComponent<Animator>();
if (animator)
{
Vector3 newPosition = transform.position;
newPosition.z += animator.GetFloat("Runspeed") * Time.deltaTime;
transform.position = newPosition;
}
}
}
You should attach RootMotionScript.cs to the “Dude” object. When you do this, the Animator component will detect that the script has an OnAnimatorMove function and show the Apply Root Motion property as Handled by Script
Did you find this page useful? Please give it a rating:
Is something described here not working as you expect it to? It might be a Known Issue. Please check with the Issue Tracker at issuetracker.unity3d.com.
Thanks for letting us know! This page has been marked for review based on your feedback.
If you have time, you can provide more information to help us fix the problem faster.
You've told us this page needs code samples. If you'd like to help us further, you could provide a code sample, or tell us about what kind of code sample you'd like to see:
You've told us there are code samples on this page which don't work. If you know how to fix it, or have something better we could use instead, please let us know:
You've told us there is information missing from this page. Please tell us more about what's missing:
You've told us there is incorrect information on this page. If you know what we should change to make it correct, please tell us:
You've told us this page has unclear or confusing information. Please tell us more about what you found unclear or confusing, or let us know how we could make it clearer:
You've told us there is a spelling or grammar error on this page. Please tell us what's wrong:
You've told us this page has a problem. Please tell us more about what's wrong:
Thanks for helping to make the Unity documentation better!