Skip to main content

Vray All Versions List

Added color correction, blending modes, and adjustments directly inside the VFB, reducing the immediate need for Photoshop or Nuke.

| Version | Date | Notes | |---------|------|-------| | 1.09.03 | 2004 | Bugfix for 3ds Max 7 compatibility. | | 1.45.70 | 2005 | Added VRayPhysicalCamera. | | 1.46.06 | 2005 | Initial VRayMtl translucency. | | 1.47.03 | 2006 | VRayProxy (proxy objects for high poly models). | | 1.48.03 | 2006 | 64-bit support on Windows. | | 1.49.01 | 2007 | Final 1.x; VRaySphereFade, true 64-bit.

Upgraded the core engine for unprecedented GPU rendering performance and native integration with the newest versions of host applications like 3ds Max, Maya, SketchUp, Rhino, and Cinema 4D.

| User Type | Recommended Version | | :--- | :--- | | | V-Ray 6 (most tutorials + stable) or latest V-Ray 7 (future-proof) | | Professional archviz | V-Ray 6 or 7 (for Enmesh and Decal) | | VFX / Feature animation | V-Ray 7 (USD & Neural rendering) | | Legacy project maintenance | Exactly the version the project started in (e.g., 3.60.03) | | Maximizing older hardware | V-Ray 5.2 (last version with good Pascal/GTX 10-series support) | vray all versions list

: The latest generation, emphasizing AI-powered tools and real-time viewport capabilities [21].

Chaos dropped the simple number system. "V-Ray Next" wasn't just a renderer; it was a "scene intelligence" system.

Built for complex particle, fluid, and dynamic simulations. Unreal) and platforms (Windows

While the core engine evolved, V-Ray had to be adapted for many different host applications. Here are the release histories for the most popular branches.

This era focused heavily on performance improvements and expanding the renderer's reach to more 3D applications.

Eliminated the need for skylight portals, drastically speeding up interior environment lighting setups. Eliminated the need for skylight portals

Introduced standalone and interactive denoising to cut render times by eliminating the need for clean, high-sample passes.

However, tracking the lineage of V-Ray can be confusing. The software exists across multiple host applications (3ds Max, Maya, SketchUp, Rhino, Revit, Houdini, Cinema 4D, Unreal) and platforms (Windows, Linux, macOS). Furthermore, Chaos has recently transitioned to a unified versioning system.

V-Ray is not a standalone software; it operates as a plugin across a wide variety of 3D modeling and CAD platforms: (The foundational platform) Autodesk Maya (Industry standard for VFX and animation) SketchUp (The most popular choice for interior designers) Rhino (Used widely in product design and architecture) Cinema 4D (Popular for motion graphics) Revit (For BIM and architectural workflows)

V-Ray All Versions List: The Evolution of Photorealistic Rendering (2002–2026)