Best 3D Rendering Software for Microsoft 365

Compare the Top 3D Rendering Software that integrates with Microsoft 365 as of October 2025

This a list of 3D Rendering software that integrates with Microsoft 365. Use the filters on the left to add additional filters for products that have integrations with Microsoft 365. View the products that work with Microsoft 365 in the table below.

What is 3D Rendering Software for Microsoft 365?

3D rendering software is used to generate realistic or stylized images from 3D models by simulating lighting, textures, and materials. These tools help designers, architects, animators, and game developers create high-quality visual representations of their designs, scenes, or products. 3D rendering software typically includes features like ray tracing, shading, texture mapping, and motion blur to enhance the realism of the images. It is used in various industries such as architecture, entertainment, product design, and virtual reality to visualize and present concepts before physical production. Compare and read user reviews of the best 3D Rendering software for Microsoft 365 currently available using the table below. This list is updated regularly.

  • 1
    WebGL

    WebGL

    KHRONOS

    OpenGL ES for the Web. WebGL is a cross-platform, royalty-free web standard for a low-level 3D graphics API based on OpenGL ES, exposed to ECMAScript via the HTML5 Canvas element. Developers familiar with OpenGL ES 2.0 will recognize WebGL as a Shader-based API using GLSL, with constructs that are semantically similar to those of the underlying OpenGL ES API. It stays very close to the OpenGL ES specification, with some concessions made for what developers expect out of memory-managed languages such as JavaScript. WebGL 1.0 exposes the OpenGL ES 2.0 feature set; WebGL 2.0 exposes the OpenGL ES 3.0 API. WebGL brings plugin-free 3D to the web, implemented right into the browser. Major browser vendors Apple (Safari), Google (Chrome), Microsoft (Edge), and Mozilla (Firefox) are members of the WebGL Working Group. Google Groups and StackOverflow discussions on developing with WebGL.
  • 2
    OGRE

    OGRE

    OGRE

    Since 2001, OGRE has grown to become one of the most popular open-source graphics rendering engines, and has been used in a large number of production projects, in such diverse areas as games, simulators, educational software, interactive art, scientific visualisation, and others. OGRE supports Windows (all major versions), Linux, OSX, Android, iOS, Javascript (via EMScripten), Windows Phone (Sponsored by Microsoft) and WinRT. Also, OGRE was ported to PS3 and Xbox360 for several titles. Ogre is released under the MIT License, which is a permissive open source license. The only condition is that you distribute the license text included in our distribution with any software that uses OGRE. Learn OGRE using our series of introducatary Tutorials. Of course the OGRE team provides official documentation in form of the OGRE Manual and API documentation.
  • 3
    Godot

    Godot

    Godot

    Godot provides a huge set of common tools, so you can just focus on making your game without reinventing the wheel. Godot is completely free and open-source under the very permissive MIT license. No strings attached, no royalties, nothing. Your game is yours, down to the last line of engine code. Nodes for all your needs. Godot comes with hundreds of built-in nodes that make game design a breeze. You can also create your own for custom behaviors, editors and much more. Flexible scene system. Create node compositions with support for instancing and inheritance. Visual editor with all the tools you need packed into a beautiful and uncluttered context-sensitive UI. Friendly content creation pipeline for artists, level designers, animators and everyone in between. Persistent live editing where changes are not lost after stopping the game. It even works on mobile devices! Create your own custom tools with ease using the incredible tool system.
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