Space Tour Dashboard: Core Features
The dashboard is the main control center for all your tours and settings.
On any plan, you can create an unlimited number of projects — the only limitation is the total storage capacity available for your account. You can always monitor your storage usage in the Subscription section.
You can access the dashboard by clicking your avatar in the top-right corner.
The Space Tour builder supports multiple languages: when you change the interface language, not only the editor UI is translated, but also the loaders inside published tours.
If you download a tour and host it on your own server, the language is fixed at the moment the archive is generated.
Important: your nickname is part of every tour’s URL.
Non-Latin characters are automatically transliterated. When you change your nickname, all tour URLs are updated accordingly — redirects from old links are not created
(example format: app.space-tour.pro/user/tour).
The notification icon opens a list of important messages.
Service updates and support replies appear here, so you don’t miss anything important.
Uploading Panoramas: The First Step to Creating a Tour
To create your first scene, start by creating a group and giving it any name.
Then upload a spherical panorama to that group.
Space Tour supports equirectangular panoramas with a 2:1 aspect ratio, in JPG or TIFF format, up to 200 MB per file.
Group and scene names can be changed at any time.
If you don’t have panoramas ready, you can download our test materials — including aerial panoramas or a sample archive with 3D renders.
After upload, panoramas are displayed in reduced quality. This helps the interface stay fast and responsive on any device.
In the published tour, the final resolution will match either your subscription plan or the original file resolution.
Space Tour supports panoramas up to 32K resolution:
- Free — up to 4000 × 2000 px
- Air — up to 8000 × 4000 px
- Plus — up to 16000 × 8000 px
- Pro — up to 32000 × 16000 px
Compass and Scene Orientation
After uploading your first panorama, a compass appears in the preview.
Using it, you can set the north direction and define the initial camera orientation for the scene.
Next to the “Set View” button, you’ll find a tool to quickly reset the selected orientation back to default if needed.
A detailed explanation of how camera orientation and compass settings work is available here: Update v1.2
Getting Started: Step-by-Step Workflow
We’ve broken the learning process into clear steps to help you get comfortable with the builder as quickly as possible:
Step 1 — Tour, group, and scene settings
Step 2 — Mini-map, hotspots, and pop-up elements
Step 3 — Polygons and advanced forms
Step 4 — Tour navigation setup