Fl Radial Blur 【Chrome】
Since "FL" most commonly refers to FL Studio in the context of audio production, but "Radial Blur" is a visual effect, your request can be interpreted in a few ways.
Here is a review based on the three most likely scenarios: fl radial blur
5. Best use cases (with examples)
- Titles that “zoom into” the screen – Apply to text, Curve = +30 to keep center readable, edges smeared for speed sensation.
- Explosion shockwaves – Keyframe Blur Length from 100 → 0 over 5 frames, Shape = Star, Rotation animated 0→45°. Gives a radiating burst effect.
- Dream/flashback transitions – Opacity 60%, Curve = -20, blur length 40. Feels like a memory rushing away from viewer.
- Map zoom effects – Instead of scaling a map layer, apply FL Radial Blur centered on target location, keyframe blur length down to zero while also scaling the layer. Smoother than native.
2. FL Studio (The DAW) & Visuals
If you are looking for a Radial Blur effect inside FL Studio for video or visualizations (like ZGameEditor Visualizer): Since "FL" most commonly refers to FL Studio
- Native Availability: FL Studio is primarily audio software. It does not have a native "Radial Blur" audio effect in its standard plugin list.
- ZGameEditor: If you are using the ZGameEditor Visualizer, there is a "Blur" effect, and you can often fake a radial blur by stacking layers and rotating them with decreasing opacity.
- Review: FL is not a video editor. The tools for visual blurring are basic. For true radial blurs, you are better off rendering your video and editing it in Premiere, After Effects, or DaVinci Resolve.
Step 3: Adjust Parameters
- Set Center to where the action should emanate (e.g., center of a logo, muzzle flash, etc.).
- Increase Amount and watch the streaks appear.
- Tweak Angle:
- 0° = pure zoom outward (explosive).
- 90° = pure rotation (spinning).
- 45° = diagonal stretch.