Triune Digital - Infinity Vfx Assets Collection... Apr 2026

Triune launched Infinity+ , a subscription at $19/month or $149/year. New assets added monthly. Existing lifetime owners kept their version but wouldn't get future updates unless they upgraded.

Some professional VFX artists argued that Infinity made editing "too easy" and led to generic, overused effects. One notable tweet: "I can spot an Infinity transition from a mile away. It's the Pumpkin Spice Latte of video editing." Triune Digital - Infinity VFX Assets Collection...

A competing brand called "VFX Supreme" copied 300+ Infinity assets exactly, renamed them, and sold the pack for $49. Triune Digital filed DMCA takedowns and a lawsuit. After three months, VFX Supreme shut down and paid $150,000 in damages. Triune launched Infinity+ , a subscription at $19/month

Here is the complete story of the , from its inception to its impact on the motion graphics and visual effects industry. Chapter 1: The Gap in the Market (Pre-2018) Before the Infinity collection, Triune Digital was already a respected name in the VFX industry, known for high-quality but individual asset packs. Filmmakers, YouTubers, and motion designers faced a common problem: creating professional-grade visual effects was either expensive (hiring a VFX artist) or time-consuming (learning complex software from scratch). Some professional VFX artists argued that Infinity made

Triune responded by adding in version 3.0 (sliders for intensity, color, speed) so advanced users could modify assets beyond presets. Chapter 7: The Pivot to Subscription (2023) The VFX industry was shifting from one-time purchases to subscription models (e.g., Motion Array, Envato Elements). Triune faced a choice: stay with $97 lifetime access or switch to monthly fees.

Triune Digital went from a 5-person team to 35 employees, with Infinity representing 70% of their business. They now offer specialized packs (horror VFX, sci-fi UI, anime effects), but Infinity remains their flagship.