There are three types of Light Probes - Reflection Cube Map - Reflection Plane - Irradiance Volume #Reflection Probes The two first are, as the name suggests, to calculate reflection maps for reflective surfaces. They may seem useless at first because you can enable *Screen Space Reflections* in EEVEE render panel, however screen space reflections have limitations. They are very fast to generate, but [can only really capture objects that are inside the view frustum][1], that is currently visible from the active point of view and directly displayed in the viewport. These probes provide calculations for more complex and accurate types of reflection through use of a helper object (the probe). ##Reflection Plane As the name suggests *Reflection Plane* are the most simple ones, suitable for mostly flat surfaces like mirrors, glass panes, floor reflections, or rainy pavements. On more irregular surfaces they will likely generate weird results. It has a clipping distance that will limit the reach of which objects are visible in its reflections. They are relatively cheap in terms of computation and work in real time, not requiring any baking. Objects with reflective materials that reside withing its range (the bounding box around it) will be influenced by what this plane "sees", benefiting from the probe reflection map. [![enter image description here][2]][2] ##Reflection Cube Map Similar to the *Reflection Plane* this will generate a more complex reflection map suited for curving shapes. Unlike the plane though this is not a real time process and requires baking, specifically the *Bake Cubemap Only* option from the *Render Panel* in the *Properties Editor*. It also has clipping distances which affect the range of what is reflected and what gets clipped away. Moving a reflective object away from its influence radius also excludes it from it's "effect". [![Cube map influence range][3]][3] #Irradiance Volume *Irradiance Volume* is a different kind of probe, it calculates indirect lighting and shadows rather than reflections. Real time rasterization engines like EEVEE although very advanced [can't really calculate indirect lighting by themselves][4], thus needs help generating and displaying this type of lighting interactions. Irradiance Volume preform both these tasks by calculating and storing the indirect lighting information in a grid array of points, the resolution of which can be adjusted from its *Resolution XYZ* in *Object Data* Properties. Once again *Clipping* affects which objects are in range for calculation, and everything inside its bounding box gets influenced by the light calculation. Likewise, since this is potentially heavy calculation that requires baking from the render panel to actually exert its influence. The higher the XYZ resolution the denser the grid, causing heavier the calculation resulting in a longer process, that conversely provides higher quality effects. [![enter image description here][5]][5] Common workflow: 1. Add probe object 2. Adjust position 3. Scale it so it encompasses all desired parts of the scene 4. Adjust clipping distances and grid density as desired 5. Bake (from render panel for *Cube Maps* and *Irrandiance Volumes*) These calculations are stored within the Blend file and should be available next time you load it, so you aren't required to bake again. #Results Here are the results of the various bake steps No Bake [![enter image description here][6]][6] Cube Maps only (no indirect lighting, notice the reflections) [![enter image description here][7]][7] Bake indirect lighting (notice the color bleeding, softer lighting, and proximity shadows) [![enter image description here][8]][8] You may use several probes per scene to get denser details where required, but each one consumes memory and has a performance penalty on the viewport, so use them wisely. [1]: https://blender.stackexchange.com/questions/126602/screen-space-reflections-in-eevee [2]: https://i.sstatic.net/fZTi2.gif [3]: https://i.sstatic.net/iT1jp.gif [4]: https://blender.stackexchange.com/questions/123724/eevee-and-cycles-render-lighting-differences [5]: https://i.sstatic.net/jiQs5.gif [6]: https://i.sstatic.net/J7Jyw.png [7]: https://i.sstatic.net/9Y21X.png [8]: https://i.sstatic.net/j6z9m.jpg