Triune Digital - Infinity Vfx Assets Collection... -
A competing brand called "VFX Supreme" copied 300+ Infinity assets exactly, renamed them, and sold the pack for $49. Triune Digital filed DMCA takedowns and a lawsuit. After three months, VFX Supreme shut down and paid $150,000 in damages.
Here is the complete story of the , from its inception to its impact on the motion graphics and visual effects industry. Chapter 1: The Gap in the Market (Pre-2018) Before the Infinity collection, Triune Digital was already a respected name in the VFX industry, known for high-quality but individual asset packs. Filmmakers, YouTubers, and motion designers faced a common problem: creating professional-grade visual effects was either expensive (hiring a VFX artist) or time-consuming (learning complex software from scratch). Triune Digital - Infinity VFX Assets Collection...
Triune responded by adding in version 3.0 (sliders for intensity, color, speed) so advanced users could modify assets beyond presets. Chapter 7: The Pivot to Subscription (2023) The VFX industry was shifting from one-time purchases to subscription models (e.g., Motion Array, Envato Elements). Triune faced a choice: stay with $97 lifetime access or switch to monthly fees. A competing brand called "VFX Supreme" copied 300+