| Feature | RSMB Pro | AE Pixel Motion Blur | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Significantly faster (multi-threaded) | Slow on HD+ footage | | Quality | Handles sub-pixel motion better | Prone to edge tearing | | Directional Blur | Supports directional & zoom blur only | Generic vectors only | | GPU Acceleration | Yes (CUDA/OpenCL) | No | | Channels | Supports multi-pass vector layers | RGBA only |
Here’s a proper look at why RSMB remains the gold standard for synthetic motion blur. When you animate a logo moving quickly across a screen or track a 3D render into live-action footage, the result often looks jittery. Without motion blur, each frame is a frozen slice of time. Our eyes expect fast-moving objects to leave a trail. reelsmart motion blur
ReelSmart Motion Blur is available for After Effects, Premiere Pro, Nuke, Fusion, and DaVinci Resolve. Pricing starts at ~$149.95 for the standard version; "Pro" adds directional and zoom blur capabilities. | Feature | RSMB Pro | AE Pixel
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In the world of visual effects and motion graphics, few things scream "fake" faster than perfectly sharp pixels sliding across a screen. While computer-generated imagery (CGI) and animation are created with pristine, mathematical clarity, real-world cameras are flawed. They blur. Our eyes expect fast-moving objects to leave a trail
Most 3D software (like After Effects or Nuke) offers native motion blur, but it requires vector data or multi-sampling, which is render-heavy. RSMB solves this differently: How ReelSmart Works (The "Smart" Part) Unlike traditional directional blur filters that smear an image in a single direction, RSMB uses vector analysis. It looks at Frame A and Frame B, calculates exactly where every pixel moved, and then reconstructs a realistic blur trail on Frame A based on that trajectory.