Fab gives away one hundred forty modular pieces for space base

Published on June 05, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

Epic Games has made available in its Fab store a package with over 140 modular pieces to build a science fiction space base. The content, which includes walls, floors, solar panels, and antennas with high-quality textures, will be available at no cost until June 16, 2026. Content creators, video game enthusiasts, or designers can access these professional tools for commercial projects legally and for free, facilitating the creation of futuristic environments.

Photorealistic engineering visualization of a modular sci-fi base construction process, showing a digital designer assembling a hexagonal space station module in a 3D software interface, one hand placing a metallic panel with solar grid texture while the other rotates a transparent holographic blueprint, floating modular pieces including antenna arrays, reinforced walls, and glowing floor tiles around the workspace, wireframe grid lines and snapping indicators visible during the assembly action, high-tech workstation with dual monitors displaying Unreal Engine viewport, blue ambient light from holographic projection, ultra-detailed mechanical joints and panel seams, cinematic volumetric lighting, technical illustration style with clean metallic surfaces and subtle emissive highlights

Technical details of the modular pack 🛠️

The package consists of pieces designed to assemble without visible gaps, allowing you to build everything from small modules to complex orbital stations. It includes dynamic lighting systems, surfaces with normal maps, and 2K resolution textures. The assets are compatible with Unreal Engine, Unity, and other popular engines, and are optimized for real-time rendering. The solar panels and antennas include basic animations, while the walls and floors offer color and wear variations to add realism to the environment.

Now we can all be space architects 🚀

The best part about this gift is that anyone can feel like a NASA engineer without having set foot in a design school. With these pieces, assembling a base on Mars is as simple as putting together IKEA furniture, only without Swedish instructions or missing screws. And if your space base ends up looking like a 1970s apartment block, you can always blame zero gravity. At least until June 2026, the only limit is your imagination (and your computer's patience).