Rhinoceros 6 Apr 2026

Rhino is a NURBS modeler, not a polygon modeler. If you do organic sculpting (ZBrush-style) or low-poly game art, you’ll fight the tools. SubD (subdivision modeling) came later in Rhino 7—in Rhino 6, it’s an afterthought.

Rhino 6 reads/writes virtually everything: .dwg, .step, .iges, .stl, .obj, .3dm, .skp (up to 2017), and more. It’s the Switzerland of CAD file exchange. Where It Stumbles 1. Steep Learning Curve The interface looks like it’s from the early 2000s (because it largely is). Menus are buried, the command line is essential, and there are 10 ways to do one thing. Expect to spend weeks learning, not days. rhinoceros 6

You can now create proper 2D drawing sheets with scaled views, dimensions, and annotations—all inside Rhino. No more exporting to Illustrator or AutoCAD just for documentation. Rhino is a NURBS modeler, not a polygon modeler

On complex files (500MB+ with hundreds of surfaces), Rhino 6 can still crash without warning. Save often. The autosave helps, but it’s not foolproof. Rhino 6 reads/writes virtually everything:

Rhino 6 finally sheds its “ugly viewport” reputation. The new display modes (especially Raytraced and PBR materials ) are usable for client presentations. The integrated Cycles render engine produces photorealistic results without exporting to another program—a huge time-saver.

Grasshopper (the visual programming plugin) now loads faster, feels more stable, and has better one-click access to the main Rhino command line. For computational designers, this alone justifies the upgrade.