Here's how a martial artist created the motions for Baldur's Gate 3 monks
The practicioner took inspiration from Shaolin and Wu Dang Kug-Fu styles.
A recent video from Larian Studios shows how the motion capture movements of the Monk class in Baldur's Gate 3 were performed by an experienced real-world unarmed martial artist. Michael Li is a French martial artist with 15 years of experience in Wu Dang and Shaolin styles. In addition to the Monk's unarmed combat, Li portrays the combat animations for Elf characters.
"I did my training in China to perfect, to learn both styles," says Li in the video, where he demonstrates some of the ideas he brought to the motion capture alongside video of himself capturing for the game.
"For the Monk I was inspired by the styles that I know, that is to say Shaolin, Wu Dang," said Li. "Then I looked for movements in these two different styles, such as the Dragon Style, that has large, circular movements adn a dragon's claw. For me, it was important to make this energy felt as an experience for the player."
"We also worked on the different elements," said Li, referring to the magical motions of the Four Elements Monk subclass. "If we take for example water I wanted it to be more fluid, circular movements, like flowing water. Whereas when we talked about fire it was sharp movements, lively movements."
You can watch the video of Li in action above, or on YouTube.
This is the second cool video from Larian about motion capture in Baldur's Gate 3 recently. Last month, the lead motion capture choreographer revealed that Lae'zel's alien swordfighting style is based on a real technique that came to an ancient samurai master in a dream.
The biggest gaming news, reviews and hardware deals
Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.
Jon Bolding is a games writer and critic with an extensive background in strategy games. When he's not on his PC, he can be found playing every tabletop game under the sun.
Baldur's Gate 3's offscreen secrets include an 'asylum' for plot-critical NPCs and a 'magical teleporting death journal' to help particularly murderous players find Act 2
Baldur's Gate 3 players have downloaded 50 million mods since official support was added, and Larian is 'glad [it] could facilitate' 10,000 players renaming Withers to Bone Daddy