Asset management is the tax nobody wants to pay. With Poliigon’s new universal asset browser Polydex, your hard drive stops being a texture landfill. Polydex scans any folder—downloads, desktop, or a lovingly curated mess—and auto-groups assets by type. Models, PBR textures, and HDRIs are all indexed, previewed, and ready for import.
Folders stay where they are. Polydex just displays what you already own, no forced rearranging, no mysterious “asset database” migrations. Whether your library comes from Poliigon, somewhere else, or that mysterious USB stick labeled “stuff_final,” Polydex recognizes it all.
Smart Detection, No Nonsense
The headline feature: Polydex identifies relevant files across any connected drive and groups them visually, with automatic handling of multi-map PBR sets (albedo, roughness, normal, etc.). HDRIs get their own section. What you see is (finally) what you have.
For Blender 4.2+ users, Polydex enables one-click import with automatic PBR shader assignment. No more wrestling with node spaghetti or hunting for that missing normal map. The importer sets up the shader network, skipping roughly a dozen manual steps per asset.

Expanding Horizons
Currently, Polydex’s Blender workflow is the main attraction. According to Poliigon, upcoming support is planned for SketchUp, 3ds Max, Cinema 4D, and Maya. At this beta stage, Linux support is “coming soon,” while macOS (11+, Apple Silicon) and Windows 10+ (64-bit) are ready to go.

Pipeline Impact—Or Not Yet?
If you’re used to managing dozens of asset folders, or trying to force bridge-type tools into your pipeline, Polydex might clean things up. Its no-move indexing and auto-grouping mean your asset chaos is finally searchable, not rearranged. Just don’t expect pipeline magic outside Blender, at least not in the current 0.9.0 beta.
As ever, always test new tools in your actual production setup before relying on them. Make sure Polydex correctly interprets your shader setups, texture channel assignments, and import requirements before shipping client renders or pipeline scripts.
Free, For Now
Polydex is free during its beta. The official Polydex page gives a direct download for Windows and macOS. No word yet on final pricing, feature gating, or licensing.
The Fine Print
Poliigon’s Polydex aims at that perpetual friction between scattered asset folders and practical DCC use. For Blender 4.2+ users, it’s an instant upgrade to asset hunting. For everyone else: watch this space, but keep your folders tidy, just in case. As always: test every tool in real-world conditions before making it a permanent part of your workflow.