Plask is a browser application that requires an account. You can process 30 seconds of video every day or you can test the pro version for 7 days. After this, you can continue to use it for $50 per month. Thanks to the pro version, you can upload unlimited videos, track multiple people in one video and the first 60 minutes of video of the month are processed faster. The video can be recorded live in the app or you can upload a video file. You can also shorten the video after uploading. Once the animation has been generated, you can find it in the library and edit it to a limited extent.
If you prefer to use your own avatar instead of the default option available, you can do so, but there are a whole series of conditions that must be met. Starting your avatar from a T-pose, a position where you extend your arms as if to form a T, is also possible. Animations can be exported in a number of standard formats.
There is a switch to turn foot lock on or off. This should ensure that your avatar does not look like the protagonist in Footloose and that the feet are therefore a little more stable on the ground. However, during our experiments, this function did not appear to change that much and this immediately brings us to a major disadvantage of this app. The feet continue to move in a very strange or floating manner and in general only the body seems to follow the provided video well. There is also no hand tracking option. Also for users who want to get started in Maya, a 3D software often used for animations, some problems with the hips may arise when a different avatar is used.
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