Maxon Command Line Render

Add-on network rendering for Cinema 4D

About this software

Subscription pack that provides additional render nodes for Cinema 4D to enable distributed or networked rendering. Intended for production studios and users who need to scale render workloads across multiple machines. Sold as an annual subscription add-on and managed alongside Cinema 4D licenses; consult publisher resources for licensing and regional details.

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Maxon Command Line Render

Maxon Command Line Render
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€329.00
Free and without obligation

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Benefits

  • Scale render capacity: Add dedicated render nodes to handle larger or concurrent render jobs
  • Reduce render times: Distribute frames and tasks across nodes to shorten total render durations
  • Integrates with Cinema 4D: Works as an add-on to Cinema 4D for network rendering workflows
  • Flexible deployment options: Install nodes on Windows or macOS machines within a local network
  • Subscription licensing: Sold and renewed as a time-limited subscription add-on

Available languages

  • English
  • German
  • French
  • Spanish
  • & more supported languages

Support information

  • Product documentation: Refer to Maxon documentation for installation and licensing guidance
  • Technical setup guides: Publisher provides setup steps for network rendering and node configuration
  • Licensing FAQs: Publisher maintains licensing FAQ and account management resources online
  • Account management portal: Manage subscriptions and node entitlements through the Maxon account or team dashboard
  • Sales and quoting: Some purchases may require a sales quote or region-specific purchase steps

Frequently asked questions

What is Maxon Command Line Render used for?
A command-line renderer for automating rendering of 3D scene files, enabling batch processing, headless operation on servers, and integration with production pipelines.
How do I start a render from the command line?
Invoke the renderer executable with the scene file path and specify output location, frame range, and any render preset or configuration through command arguments.
What types of output can be generated with the tool?
Typical outputs include single-frame renders or image sequences and optionally encoded video files, depending on chosen render settings and export options.
How can it be used in automated pipelines and render farms?
Automate job submission by scripting command invocations, parameterizing scene and output arguments, and capturing outputs and logs for downstream processing and monitoring.