Video games are notorious for taking years to build because artists have to hand-craft every rock, tree, and building. With Splat technology, developers can scan real-world ruins or cities and drop them directly into a game engine. Mouse execution systems then allow gamers to aim, interact, and move through these hyper-realistic, scanned environments flawlessly. 2. Immersive Journalism and Media

Imagine reading a news article about a historic site or a disaster zone, and instead of just looking at a flat photo, you can use your mouse to fly through a perfect 3D reconstruction of the actual location. Media companies are beginning to leverage Gaussian splats to give readers a true, ground-level sense of scale and space. 3. Interactive Filmmaking and Virtual Production

The fusion of fast 3D rendering and highly precise mouse-driven interactivity is unlocking massive potential across several creative industries: 1. Next-Gen Gaming and Open Worlds

It takes a handful of standard 2D photos of an object or place.

Edit, resize, or move real-world objects digitized into 3D environments. 🎬 Splat Mouse Ex in Entertainment & Media

To understand how this changes entertainment, you have to understand the tech. Traditionally, video games and 3D movies use "polygons"—flat shapes stitched together to make a 3D model. This is heavy to compute and hard to make look perfectly lifelike. takes a different route:

A gorgeous 3D scene is useless in entertainment if you cannot interact with it. That is where (Mouse Execution/Extension) comes into play.

It "splats" them together to form a highly accurate, photo-perfect 3D environment.