The Future of Motion Design: Live Talk from AEPDX 2025
In this keynote from Portland, Joey explores "The Futurey Feeling" - that sensation when you recognize the next big shift in motion design before everyone else catches on. Drawing from 25+ years in the industry, Joey breaks down three massive technological shifts happening right now:
Have you ever had that feeling when you see a new technology and just know it's going to change everything? That moment when you recognize the future before everyone else catches on? Joey Korenman calls this "The Futurey Feeling" – and if you're a motion designer, you need to pay attention to it.
In this keynote presentation from Portland, OR's AEPDX event, Joey draws from over 25 years in the motion design industry to identify three massive technological shifts happening right now. These aren't just incremental improvements – they're paradigm changes that will define the next decade of our industry.
The Pattern of Disruption
Before diving into the current wave, Joey takes us back through history to show a consistent pattern. From the desktop editing revolution that killed traditional post houses to the rise of CGI that transformed filmmaking, technological disruption follows a predictable cycle:
Resistance - Industry veterans dismiss the new technology as inferior
Gradual adoption - Early adopters start proving the technology's worth
Explosive growth - Demand skyrockets as barriers drop (Jevons Paradox in action)
New opportunities - More work emerges than ever existed before
The key insight? Every time technology makes something easier and cheaper, demand explodes rather than shrinks.
The Three Current Waves
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1. Real-Time 3D Rendering
We're witnessing the democratization of real-time 3D engines like Unreal Engine. This isn't just about faster renders – it's about entirely new possibilities:
Feature films rendered entirely in real-time (like the Oscar-nominated film rendered on the director's home PC)
Live concert visuals that respond dynamically to the performance (Phish at the Sphere)
Virtual production shoots getting 8+ locations in a day instead of 2-3
Real-time client sessions for 3D work, just like we do with editing
The technology exists today. Most clients don't know it's possible yet. That's your opportunity.
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2. Interactive Animation Revolution
The second wave is already transforming how we create animation for apps and websites. Tools like Rive are eliminating the painful translation process between After Effects and code:
Direct handoff from motion designer to developer
Responsive design built into animation workflows
Real-time interactivity without complex development
Massive market expansion beyond traditional motion design
Companies like Duolingo are already building entire studios around this workflow, acquiring traditional motion design shops to fuel their app experiences.
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3. AI as a Creative Accelerator
The third wave is the most controversial but potentially most transformative. AI isn't replacing motion designers – it's giving them superpowers:
Asset generation on demand instead of hunting through stock libraries
Visual ideation that accelerates the creative process
Technical problem solving for tasks that used to require specialists
Rapid prototyping of concepts that would be too expensive to test traditionally
The key is understanding AI as a tool for making the impossible possible within budget and deadline constraints.
Why This Matters Now
We're at an inflection point. The motion design industry just emerged from a challenging couple of years, but leading indicators suggest we're entering a growth phase. The studios and freelancers who understand these technological shifts – and can educate their clients about new possibilities – will capture disproportionate value.
The opportunity isn't just in using these tools. It's in being the person who shows clients what's suddenly possible.
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Your Next Steps
You don't need to master all three areas immediately. Pick the one that resonates most and start experimenting:
For real-time 3D: Download Unreal Engine and start with basic scene creation
For interactive animation: Try Rive for your next web or app project
For AI integration: Experiment with Midjourney for asset creation or ChatGPT for ideation
The goal isn't perfection – it's awareness. When you spot an opportunity that matches one of these capabilities, you'll be ready to act.
The Futurey Feeling in Action
Joey's message is ultimately optimistic. Yes, technological change can feel threatening. But history shows us that making creative work easier and more accessible creates exponentially more opportunities, not fewer.
The motion designers who thrive in the next decade won't be the ones who resist change – they'll be the ones who embrace it early, educate their clients about new possibilities, and ride the wave of expanded demand.
Are you feeling futurey yet?
Show Notes
Artists & Studios Mentioned:
Arahon Rabinowitz - VP of Marketing at School of Motion, creator of the Unreal Engine short film
EJ Hassenfratz - 3D Creative Director at School of Motion
Cart + Horse - Detroit-based duo doing virtual production work
Ryan Corniel - Artist creating real-time VR puppets
Two Fresh - Studio behind Super Bowl broadcast graphics
Capacity - Studio behind Rocket League broadcast package
Deep Sky - VFX studio mentioned throughout
Territory Studios - Known for fake UI work in films
Jesus Plaza - Filmmaker behind AI-generated spec commercial
Karen X. Chang - Artist combining traditional animation with AI assets
Sarofsky Studio - Creators of "Meet the Scrims" Instagram series
Phil Tippett - Legendary VFX supervisor (Star Wars, Jurassic Park)
Genndy Tartakovsky - Director of Hotel Transylvania
Moment Factory - Studio behind Phish concert visuals
Tools & Technologies:
Unreal Engine - Real-time 3D rendering engine
Rive - Interactive animation platform for apps and web
Octane Render - GPU-based rendering engine
Midjourney - AI image generation
Google Veo 2 (now 3) - AI video generation
Sora - OpenAI's video generation tool
Krea - AI tool for controlled asset creation
Magnific - AI upscaling tool
Adobe Firefly - Adobe's AI image generation
Inspector Spacetime - After Effects to JSON plugin by Adam Plouff/Battleax
Films & Projects Referenced:
The Wild Robot - Oscar-nominated film rendered in real-time
Jurassic Park (1993) - CGI breakthrough film
Toy Story (1995) - First fully CG animated feature
Young Sherlock Holmes - Featured first CG character in live action
Hotel Transylvania - Showcasing extreme character animation
The Mandalorian - Popularized virtual production techniques
Concepts Discussed:
Jevons Paradox - Economic principle about technology making things cheaper leading to increased demand
Desktop Editing Revolution - The shift from expensive editing suites to computer-based editing
Real-time Client Sessions - Conducting creative reviews with instant feedback
Responsive Design - Animation that adapts to different screen sizes
Virtual Production - Filming with real-time digital environments
Fake UI - User interface graphics for film and TV
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