Player Emotes

Adding animated player emotes

Main features

  • Blockbench extension to animate the Minecraft player model

  • Completely Async, no TPS drops

  • Optimized for big servers

  • Play sounds and particles in animations

  • Shows player hands and helmet equipment

Limitations

  • Won't show the player armor equipment, only mainhand, offhand and helmet.

  • Works only on Minecraft 1.17+

  • Shaders mods (Optifine, Iris) can cause rendering problems, read more here.

  • Placed heads won't be shown correctly in some cases, read more here.

Installing the Blockbench extension

Download Blockbench (don't use the web app).

Download the extension file.

Then open Blockbench and click on File -> Plugins.

Click on the icon to load plugins from file, then select the file iaentitymodel.js.

Press OK

Enabling emotes

Open config.yml of ItemsAdder and enable these two options, then run /iazip command.

config.yml
entities:
  custom-entitites:
    enabled: true
    emotes: true

Opening the animations editor

Create a new "ItemsAdder Entity Model"

You can create as many as animations files you want (ItemsAdder 3.2.1+).

Decide if you want to create an emotes file with examples or a blank emotes file.

Decide a name for your emotes pack.

You can notice a lot of example animations on the left.

Delete all the emotes and edit/rename the ones you want. They are useful only as base for your new emotes, to have an example to learn from.

Now create a new animation (emote) and save your .iaentitymodel project file into this folder (change my_emotes to your namespace, this one is an example): ItemsAdder/contents/my_emotes/resourcepack/

Then continue following the tutorial to know how to export the emotes into ItemsAdder.

Apply the changes to ItemsAdder

Click on the ItemsAdder tab and press Export.

You should get a success message.

Playing the animations

Use the emote command: /iaemote <emote> [player] or /emote <emote> [player]

Emote permission

Use the /iaemote command: ia.user.iaemote

Use an emote: ia.user.iaemote.use.<emote> Example: ia.user.iaemote.use.yes

More info about permissions

Permissions

Adding custom models into emotes

Showcase of some examples

Here you can download an example project:

You can add custom models to your emotes, for example: items, monsters, furniture, animated effects.

Important

Different type of emotes

  • .player_advanced_animations file format is now used to identify player animations which also add custom models to the emote.

  • .player_animations are the player animations which don't add any custom model but will be loaded into the default player model.

In order to decide that you have to set this option in the Blockbench extension settings.

image

Importing elements into the scene

You can import any .bbmodel into the scene and use it in your animation. You can also import extruded textures to show items dynamically.

Hiding unused elements in other animations of the game .iaentitymodel emotes file

  1. select the animation

  2. select the element you want to hide for a particular animation

  3. move to the first frame of the animation, using the timeline

  4. create a new scale key, make sure to set it to the first keyframe

  5. set scale to 0

Now your model won't be shown for this particular animation. You can show/hide it in the middle of the animation just by doing the same thing but setting scale to 1.

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