is often described as the "secret weapon" of the 2D animation world. While titans like Adobe Animate and Toon Boom Harmony dominate industry conversations, Moho Pro has carved out a unique space by focusing on high-end rigging that feels almost like working in 3D, but with a purely 2D aesthetic. The Magic of "Smart Bones" The crown jewel of Moho Pro is its Smart Bone

For a more traditional feel, use a graphics tablet to draw directly into Moho Pro. This can help you achieve the expressiveness of hand-drawn paper animation with the flexibility of digital editing.

At the heart of Moho Pro’s appeal is its ability to bridge the gap between traditional hand-drawn aesthetics and modern efficiency. Its Smart Bones

"Go further," Kael urged. "Use the ."

provide granular control over timing and spacing, allowing for fluid, natural movement. Furthermore, its integration of 3D objects and a dedicated physics engine allows animators to simulate gravity, wind, and collisions, adding a layer of realism to 2D environments.

Moho Pro includes a hidden gem: for bones. You can attach a "chain" of bones to a character’s hair or cape and enable physics. When the character stops moving, the hair will bounce and settle naturally without the animator having to touch it.

Workflow strengths Moho Pro excels in projects where character-driven animation must be produced quickly yet retain personality: web series, TV episodes, educational shorts, explainer videos, and indie films. Its rigging system encourages reuse—characters once rigged can be animated repeatedly with lower marginal effort. The combination of vector assets with mesh deformation allows stylized designs to move convincingly without laborious redraws.