Minecraft 1.8.9 Motion Blur Shader Site

// Sample current scene (you'd need the actual scene texture) // For simplicity: just blend previous frame with white/grey vec4 scene = vec4(0.5, 0.5, 0.5, 1.0); // dummy – won't work well

// Simple linear blend between current and previous frame vec4 result = mix(current, previous, blurStrength);

uniform sampler2D colortex0; // previous frame's color uniform sampler2D colortex1; // current frame's color (for blending) uniform float viewWidth; uniform float viewHeight; minecraft 1.8.9 motion blur shader

#version 120 varying vec2 texcoord; uniform sampler2D colortex0; // contains last frame's result uniform float frameTimeCounter;

// Motion blur strength – adjust to taste (0.05 = subtle, 0.25 = strong) const float blurStrength = 0.12; // Sample current scene (you'd need the actual

Unlike modern versions, 1.8.9 does not support depth or velocity buffers easily, so this shader creates a – a simple but effective effect that smooths movement and gives a sense of speed. 📁 File Structure (inside your shaderpack folder) YourShaderpack/ ├── shaders/ │ ├── final.fsh │ ├── final.vsh │ └── (optional: gbuffers_terrain.vsh, etc. – not needed for this simple version) └── shaders.properties 🔧 1. final.vsh (vertex shader) #version 120 varying vec2 texcoord;

void main() gl_Position = ftransform(); texcoord = gl_MultiTexCoord0.xy; void main() gl_Position = ftransform()

void main() vec4 current = texture2D(colortex0, texcoord); vec4 newPixel = vec4(0.0);

/* ALTERNATIVE: directional blur (if you had velocity data) But for 1.8.9, basic frame blending is safer and more reliable */

gl_FragColor = current * fadeFactor;