![]() ![]() ![]() Do note there is things like photoediting, vector graphics and etc are not part of that. The graphic is talking about Digital Painting Software marketshare. ![]() Also look up student discounts, they may shave off a fair bit if you are a student If you're gonna do UX stuff you may also need Illustrator (vector tools in Krita suck major ass), so that'd definitely be worth the investment. Professionally you'd want to avoid being rusty because it makes working a pain One more thing, the professional world still expects you to know a fair bit about PS and UI-wise it's not as 1:1 to Krita as you might think. Really, I'd just say try both (I think you can still get a 30 day trial) and see for yourself. PS also has some functionality like layer comps, content aware fill, AI selection tools that just make life easier when you have to quickly make stuff. But at least on my computer with a very decent graphics card it just starts complaining, crashing etc. Krita is great when you have up to like 20 layers with no clipping masks or blend modes. But have spent my fair share of hours in both. ![]() So, I'm no professional in either program. Almost like the "Blender" of drawing applications. But in order for people to take it seriously, they have to see more quality work being made with it. To be fair, Krita is easily powerful enough to stand toe-to-toe against any of the mentioned applications and even some of my personal favorites (Rebelle, ArtRage, SketchBook Pro). It's really good, really cheap and has only gotten better as time passed. Procreate is popular because its debut on iPad hit like a A-bomb. The subscription based pricing model and overall bloat of the application is not though. Photoshop is a industry standard for a good reason. It's easy for a manga/anime fan to support CSP when your favorite manga artist is using it. Think about it for a second, CSP is THE tool that a lot of anime fans use because a lot of anime and manga artists overseas support it. ![]()
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