Modular Sci-Fi Interiors With Just 6 Materials – Built for Blender
If you’ve ever tried to build a sci-fi corridor or control room in Blender and found yourself knee-deep in kitbash chaos or juggling too many materials, this might save you some serious time.
Dallas (a new creator working with 3D Tudor’s Starving Artist Campaign) just dropped a modular sci-fi interior kit built for artists like you who want clean, game-ready assets that just work out of the box.
What’s Inside
You’re getting:
- 48 modular assets – walls, floors, ceiling pieces, terminals, walkways, crates, lights, vents, and more
- 14 sci-fi decals – warnings, labels, overlays, screens, and grime for storytelling & surface detail
- 6 trim-sheet-based materials – keeps everything optimized and super efficient
- 2K PBR textures – Base Colour, Roughness, Normal (2048×2048)
- Clean UVs, organized naming, and non-destructive mid-poly geometry
Formats include .blend, .fbx, .glb, and a full UE5 demo scene if you’re also working in Unreal.
Why It’s Useful
The trim-sheet workflow means every asset shares the same handful of materials, so performance stays solid—whether you’re in EEVEE, Cycles, or real-time engines like UE5 or Unity.
Everything is built to snap together easily, so you can block out your scene without constantly adjusting pivots or fixing topology. It’s drag, drop, light, done.
If you’re after something more polished, the Deluxe version includes a fully lit Blender scene and 3D Tudor’s Blendcraft Compositor addon—a simple post-processing tool that gives you bloom, glare, and colour grading with almost no setup.
Bonus: Support While You Build
This pack is Dallas’s first release as part of 3D Tudor’s Starving Artist Campaign. That means half of every sale goes directly to him—and the rest covers the boring stuff like marketing and platform logistics, so he can stay focused on creating.
You can check out the pack on Gumroad and see what others are building with it on the 3D Tudor Discord. It’s a great place to share WIPs, get feedback, or just geek out about Blender.
If you’re working on sci-fi scenes and want a solid set of base assets, this could be a handy addition to your toolkit.
Until next time, happy modelling, everyone!
Neil – 3D Tudor
