SceneDrop turns text descriptions into optimized, interactive WebGL experiences you can drop into any website. No 3D expertise required. Just describe what you see.
Start Creating →Tools like Meshy and Tripo3D generate raw 3D models in seconds. But raw isn't ready. The output is unoptimized, non-interactive, and won't run smoothly on a phone. The gap between "AI-generated mesh" and "production website experience" is enormous. That's where SceneDrop lives.
AI-generated scenes tank at 8 FPS. SceneDrop output runs at 60+ FPS on mobile through automatic LOD, shader optimization, and asset compression.
Raw 3D is static. SceneDrop adds scroll-driven animations, mouse tracking, touch controls, and event systems automatically.
AI outputs look generic. SceneDrop applies cinematic lighting, curated shaders, and VFX-grade polish from a library built on 20 years of production experience.
Type what you want. "Rotating product showcase with particle trails and glass refraction." Natural language, not shader code.
SceneDrop generates, optimizes, and stress-tests the scene. Automatic LOD, texture compression, shader baking, and performance profiling.
Get an embed code. One script tag or iframe. It runs on any device, any browser. Production-ready out of the box.
Not another AI 3D generator. SceneDrop is the production layer that makes AI output actually usable on the web.
Every scene is profiled against real device targets. If it can't hit 60 FPS on a mid-range phone, it doesn't ship. Automatic optimization handles the rest.
Shaders and lighting presets from someone who worked on Elysium and Final Fantasy. The "taste layer" that separates production from prototype.
Outputs Three.js components that work today on WebGL and are forward-compatible with WebGPU as browser support rolls out.
Script tag or iframe. Works with Webflow, WordPress, Shopify, React, plain HTML. No SDK, no build step, no configuration.
We're building the bridge between AI-generated 3D and the experiences humans actually feel. The reality press starts here.
Create Your First Scene →