Aseprite Redo [EXTENDED]

On the fourth night, exhausted, he held down Ctrl and dragged a selection box over the entire scene. Delete. Blank canvas.

: You can use the Redo command multiple times to step forward through several undone actions. The Undo History System

Tip: If you often experience software slowdowns while working on long animation sequences, try reducing the Memory Limit slightly to free up your computer's system resources. Advanced Navigation: The Undo History Panel aseprite redo

He placed the lantern first, but this time he didn't give it to the hero. He gave it to a child, a small pixel figure sitting on a stump, holding the light up to a sky full of stars he hadn't drawn before. The dragon became a sleeping mountain range in the background. The wind became a single, slow-moving cloud.

His hands hovered over the keyboard. He could rebuild. He had the sketches, the concept art. But the feel of it—the exact dithering on the dragon's scales, the 12-frame wind sweep of the grass, the way the hero’s cape caught a lantern's glow—that was gone. On the fourth night, exhausted, he held down

: Press Ctrl + Y (Windows/Linux) or Cmd + Y (macOS) to Redo the last action.

Mastering Undo and Redo Actions in Aseprite: The Complete Guide : You can use the Redo command multiple

A unique aspect of Aseprite is how Redo interacts with the Timeline.

Aseprite follows industry-standard keyboard shortcuts for moving backward and forward through your project's history. 1. The Undo Command

A floating panel will appear listing every single action you have taken since opening the file (e.g., "Draw Freehand", "Move Selection", "Change Palette").

At its most fundamental level, Redo is the act of moving forward through your timeline after you have stepped backward.