ONYX Ai Matte: AI Revolutionizes Rotoscoping in VFX

Published on March 26, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

Rotoscoping, the tedious process of separating moving objects from the background, has been a bottleneck in post-production for decades. ONYX Ai Matte arrives to transform this workflow. This plugin, with GPU acceleration, uses artificial intelligence to automatically generate high-quality masks, saving hours of manual work. Compatible with OFX standards in software like DaVinci Resolve, Fusion Studio, and Nuke, it presents itself as an accessible and powerful solution for visual effects artists.

ONYX Ai Matte plugin interface in action, showing a precise AI mask over a moving actor.

Practical Operation and Technical Advantages 🤖

ONYX Ai Matte is not a black box. Users can guide the process in multiple ways: by making a rough selection around the object, placing key reference points, refining with manual masks, or even with simple text prompts. The AI, based on public models, handles precise tracking, capable of following multiple objects at once. After generation, it offers tools to refine edges and details. Requiring an NVIDIA CUDA GPU, it maximizes its speed, positioning itself as an economical alternative to more expensive native or third-party solutions, with perpetual licenses for individuals and studios.

Impact on Productivity and the Future of Workflow âš¡

The true revolution of ONYX Ai Matte is the time recovered. By automating the most repetitive task, it allows artists to focus on higher-value creative tasks. For studios, this translates to greater production capacity and cost reduction. For freelancers, it is a professional-level tool that levels the playing field. Its seven-day free trial model invites experimentation with this paradigm shift, where AI takes on the heavy lifting and the artist directs the final result with precision.

Can the AI of ONYX Matte finally eliminate the bottleneck of manual rotoscoping and make isolating complex objects as fast as rendering an effect?

(P.S.: VFX are like magic: when they work, no one asks how; when they fail, everyone sees it.)