
(Image by DaKaktus)
From Wikipedia - "A greeble or nurnie is a small piece of detailing added to break up the surface of an object to add visual interest to a surface or object, particularly in movie special effects."
This is actually an old plugin for 3ds Max, created by Tom Hudson for creating complex surfaces, that you can download for free. For those of you who are using 3ds Max and have not yet heard of Greeble, take a look at some of these Greeble art I found on deviantart. Most of them were done in 3ds Max using the Greeble plugin.

(Image by farazkhwaja)

(Image by sentimentalfreak)

(Image by aptoverde)

(Image by Zaguri)

(Image by aphaits)

(Image by kiksu333)

(Image by sentimentalfreak)

(Image by rotemlo)

(Image by Ciamek)
There are a lot of other artists that have been using Greeble for their 3d visualization works because of the complex detail it produces and most of them you would find in the internet.
I am very much intrigued with this 3ds Max plugin and I may try to make a Greeble art myself one of these days and I'll post it here for your comments, hehe.
If you are interested in trying out Greeble, it's a free plugin that you can download from Tom Hudson's website. He has Greeble versions for most 3ds Max versions, from Release 3 to 2009.
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