Silo 2026.1: Faster 3D Modeling and glTF Support for One Hundred Fifty Nine Dollars

Published on June 05, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

Nevercenter has released Silo 2026.1, an update promising a viewport one hundred times faster and support for glTF files. For designers and 3D modeling enthusiasts, this translates into more agile workflows for video games and animations. The program is sold with a perpetual license for $159, and the update is free for those who purchased it in the last year. A solid option for those seeking efficiency without subscriptions.

3D modeling software interface showing a character mesh being sculpted in real-time, polygon wireframe glowing blue as a digital hand manipulates vertices, glTF file export icon floating beside the tool palette, viewport rendering at extreme speed with motion trails fading behind each edit, cinematic technical illustration style, sleek dark UI with neon accent lighting, photorealistic material preview on the model, depth of field focusing on the active brush tool, subtle particle effects around the cursor demonstrating rapid response

GPU-accelerated viewport and native glTF support 🚀

The performance leap in the viewport is due to a rewrite of the rendering engine, fully leveraging GPU acceleration. The inclusion of glTF allows exporting models directly to game engines and augmented reality applications without intermediate conversions. Nevercenter has optimized high-density mesh management, reducing wait times in complex scenes. Users will notice smoother navigation even on modest hardware, facilitating quick design iterations and less frustration.

Now your 2015 laptop feels like a quantum workstation ⚡

According to Nevercenter, the viewport is one hundred times faster. In other words, if it used to take a minute to rotate a model, you'll now do it in 0.6 seconds. Almost enough time to blink and miss the moment of glory. For $159, your old computer will stop sounding like a blender and start rendering as if it had downed a Red Bull. The only downside: now you have no excuse to blame the software for your crooked models.