

High poly player models can affect your fps, which is why I have included a polycount for each model - the higher the polycount, the more likely you are of getting fps drops. mdl file and its parent folder to either red or blue. If you wish to use a different color simply rename the. In most of the downloads for the red and blue models I have included different colors - red, blue, green, pink and yellow. Red and blue models go inside their own folder inside the half-life\ag\models\player folder. To use these, put the player.mdl and playert.mdl files inside your half-life\ag\models folder. Hopefully this should give players a variety of models to choose from.

The red and blue models are split into 3 categories, firstly there is the standard red/blue style model, then there is the bright models and lastly the glow models. I have stuck to 3 basic model shapes and created different specific features for each.

I have created or reworked most of the models below (excluding sarge) with the intention of increasing visibility whilst reducing texture size and filesize and generally cleaning the model files. This is a selection of red and blue models and player model reskins. However you can edit the textures of the player model (the default model used when you change to a model which isn't found in the models folder) and of course, you can replace the red and blue models to any model. barney, gina, gman, gordon, helmet, hgrunt, recon, robo, scientist, zombie. Valve and HLDM:AG have locked certain player models and you cannot change the valve models ie. It's a dialogue that we are proud of, and one we are committed to continuing in the years to come.A good set of player models is helpful for those who struggle to see the default models against background textures. It's inspired a deeper appreciation for what our bodies are capable of, the power they possess, the flaws they force us to accept, what they can overcome and where they can take us. It's driven and shaped the conversation around what athletes look like and what it means to have a body that is perfect for your sport. Over the past 11 years, through thousands of photographs of more than 200 athletes, ESPN's BODY franchise has helped change the way people think about the athletic form. Golf legend Gary Player, in 2013, proving you can still have ripped abs at age 77. Paralympic rower Oksana Masters daring to pose without her prosthetic legs in 2012. Transgender duathlete Chris Mosier sharing his powerful transitioning story with the world in 2016.

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