A Terrain Layer is an Asset that defines a TerrainThe landscape in your scene. A Terrain GameObject adds a large flat plane to your scene and you can use the Terrain’s Inspector window to create a detailed landscape. More info
See in Glossary’s surface qualities. A Terrain Layer holds TexturesAn image used when rendering a GameObject, Sprite, or UI element. Textures are often applied to the surface of a mesh to give it visual detail. More info
See in Glossary and other properties that the Terrain’s Material uses to render the Terrain surfaces. Because Terrain Layers are Assets, you can easily reuse them on multiple Terrain tiles.
You can add Textures to the surface of a Terrain to create coloration and fine detail. Terrain GameObjectsThe fundamental object in Unity scenes, which can represent characters, props, scenery, cameras, waypoints, and more. A GameObject’s functionality is defined by the Components attached to it. More info
See in Glossary are usually large, so it is best to use a base Terrain Layer with Textures that tile over the surface and repeat seamlessly. You can use multiple Terrain Layers, each with different Textures, to build up interesting, varied Terrain surfaces.
The first Terrain Layer you apply to a Terrain automatically becomes the base layer, and spreads over the whole landscape. In addition, you can paint areas with other Terrain Layers to simulate different ground surfaces, such as grass, desert, or snow. To create a gradual transition between grassy countryside and a sandy beach, you might choose to apply Textures with variable opacity.
To create a Terrain Layer directly in the Terrain InspectorA Unity window that displays information about the currently selected GameObject, Asset or Project Settings, alowing you to inspect and edit the values. More info
See in Glossary, click the paintbrush icon in the toolbarA row of buttons and basic controls at the top of the Unity Editor that allows you to interact with the Editor in various ways (e.g. scaling, translation). More info
See in Glossary at the top of the Terrain Inspector, and select Paint Texture from the drop-down menu. At the bottom of the Terrain Layers section, click the Edit Terrain Layers button, and choose Create Layer.
When you select Create Layer, Unity opens the Select Texture2D window. Here, choose the image to use as the Diffuse channel of the Terrain Layer. To assign a Normal MapA type of Bump Map texture that allows you to add surface detail such as bumps, grooves, and scratches to a model which catch the light as if they are represented by real geometry. More info
See in Glossary or Mask Map Texture to your Terrain Layer, select the corresponding Terrain Layer in the Project viewA view that shows the contents of your Assets folder (Project tab) More info
See in Glossary, and use its Inspector window.
Alternatively, to create a Terrain Layer Asset that isn’t automatically associated with a Terrain, right-click the Project window, and select Create > Terrain Layer from the context menu. Then, configure the various properties in the Inspector window for your new Terrain Layer.
For information about how the number of Terrain Layers affects renderingThe process of drawing graphics to the screen (or to a render texture). By default, the main camera in Unity renders its view to the screen. More info
See in Glossary performance, see Rendering performance. Even assigned Terrain Layers that you do not actually paint onto the Terrain tile might impact the rendering performance.
Initially, a Terrain has no Terrain Layers assigned to it. By default, it uses a checkerboard Texture until you add a Terrain Layer.
After you create a Terrain Layer in your Project, click the Edit Terrain Layers button and select Add Layer to open the Select TerrainLayer window. Double-click on a Terrain Layer in this window to add it to your Terrain.
Depending on the Material that is set in the Terrain Settings, as well as the Render Pipeline that is currently in use, you might see different options and properties in the Inspector.
PropertyA generic term for the editable fields, buttons, checkboxes, or menus that comprise a component. An editable property is also referred to as a field. More info See in Glossary |
Description | |
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Diffuse | The Diffuse Texture represents the base color Texture of the Terrain Layer. The Alpha channel of the Diffuse Texture has different uses, which depend on the active Scriptable Render Pipeline and Shader you use to render the Terrain. For example, the High Definition Render Pipeline (HDRP) uses the Alpha channel for Smoothness. However, if there is a Mask Map Texture on the Terrain Layer, it uses the Alpha channel of the Diffuse Texture for Density values. |
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Normal Map | The Normal Map Texture contains the normal information for your Terrain Layer. Unity uses this information in lighting calculations. • If you do not assign a Normal Map Texture and enable instancing in the Terrain Settings, the Terrain uses the normals generated from the Terrain heightmap. • If you assign a Normal Map Texture and enable instancing, Unity uses the Normal Map Texture instead of the normals generated from the heightmap. • If you disable instancing on the Terrain, the built-in Terrain Material uses normals generated from the Terrain geometry, even if you assign a Normal Map Texture on the Terrain Layer. |
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Normal Scale | If you assign a Normal Map Texture, a new field called Normal Scale appears in the Terrain Layer settings. This value acts as a scaling factor for the normal values present in the Normal Map. A value of 0 means that the normals stored in the Normal Map have a scale of 0, while a value of 1 means that the normals are at full scale or influence. Examples and results of different Normal Scale values: |
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Normal Scale = 0 | • Multiplies the unpacked normal value by 0. • The strength, and thus the length, of the normal will be 0, and has no effect on lighting calculations. The mesh triangle on the Terrain effectively uses the mesh normal for lighting calculations. |
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Normal Scale = 1 | • Multiplies the unpacked normal value by 1. • The strength of the normal will be 100%. |
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Normal Scale = 2 | • Multiplies the unpacked normal value by 2. • The strength of the normal will be 200%, and appear twice as pronounced as normals with a Normal Scale of 1. |
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Normal Scale = –1 | • Multiples the unpacked normal value by –1. • The strength of the normal will be at 100% but negated, making the normals point in the opposite direction from normals with a Normal Scale of 1. |
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Mask Map | The TerrainLit shader, which is part of the High Definition Render Pipeline (HDRP), uses this Mask Map Texture data. Custom Terrain shaders might also use this Texture for user-defined purposes, such as ambient occlusion or height-based blending. For the HDRP TerrainLit Shader, the RGBA channels of the Mask Map Texture correspond to: |
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R | Metallic | |
G | Ambient Occlusion | |
B | Height | |
A | Smoothness (Diffuse Alpha becomes Density) | |
Channel Remapping | If you assign a Mask Map Texture, a new heading called Channel Remapping appears in the Terrain Layer settings. Click the triangle next to that heading to display the fields for minimum and maximum RGBA values. Unity uses these ranges to remap values in each channel of the Mask Map Texture. | |
Specular | The specular highlight color of the Terrain Layer. | |
Metallic | The overall metallic value of the Terrain Layer. | |
Smoothness | The overall smoothness value of the Terrain Layer. | |
Tiling Settings | The tiling settings that apply to all Textures the Terrain Layer uses. | |
Size | The size of the Textures in Terrain space, and how often the Textures tile. | |
Offset | A base offset that Unity applies to the sample location for each Texture in the Terrain Layer. |
Unity applies the first Terrain Layer you add to the entire landscape. If you add multiple Terrain Layers, use the Paint Texture tool to apply subsequent Textures to your Terrain.
If you add a new Terrain tile without any Terrain Layers, and paint on it, the system automatically adds the selected Terrain Layer to that new Terrain tile. Because this is the first Terrain Layer, that Texture becomes the base layer, and fills the entire Terrain tile.
In the Terrain Inspector, under Brushes, there is a box that displays the available Brushes, along with the Brush Size and Opacity options underneath. See Creating and Editing Terrains for more information about these tools.
The number of Terrain Layers you assign to a Terrain tile might impact the performance of the renderer.
The built-in renderer and Lightweight Render Pipeline each support four Terrain Layers per Texture pass, with no limit on the number of passes. This means that although you are allowed to use as many Terrain Layers as you want, each pass increases the time spent rendering the Terrain. For maximum performance, limit each of your Terrain tiles to four Terrain Layers.
If you’re using the High Definition Render Pipeline, you can add up to eight Terrain Layers per Terrain tile, and the system renders them in a single pass. No additional passes are possible. If you add more than eight Terrain Layers, they appear in the Unity Editor, but are ignored at run time.
2019–04–18 Page amended with editorial review
Updated screenshot to match new UI and improved description of properties
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