[002] All Our Revisions


Did a lot this week, though not as much as I had hoped (as usual, but that's okay.)

Dialogue Revisions

I finished a 2nd revision of the dialogue's first draft. I started this over the weekend, and thought I would finish on Monday, but it actually took through Tuesday. It's a really hard task! But it helps if you really have the personalities of your characters in mind. I couldn't imagine doing this if I didn't already have the game world designed and planned.

I had waited a few weeks to do this, so as to distance myself from the initial draft. The first draft had its moments where dialogue was hastily typed out (because, with first drafts sometimes you've just gotta write garbage to push to the end!). Here are changes that happened in this revision. I'll probably go through again at some point to 'tighten it up', but I'm pretty satisfied.

  • Fixing the characters' tones of voices. Most characters show up briefly, but what is tougher is keeping in mind the character development of some of the main characters. This was hard to get right on the first draft, but once you can 'see it all together', it's much easier to tweak the tone of voice/personality of character dialogue to better fit the character's development.
  • Overall trimming down. A lot of conversations ran too long or were redundant, so I condensed them. This is better, as it's clearer for me to see what conversations are accomplishing, better for the player, etc.
  • Better embedding of themes. A lot of my main themes are kind of hard to grapple and express in fiction, so this 2nd draft allowed me to better figure out how to adjust conversations so the interactions and criticisms characters give each other help to express those themes. I can't speak on much because spoilers, but the 2nd half of the game, especially the endgame, are much stronger now.
    • I've been finding that a useful way to get at complicated themes is to have one character criticize another's actions/flaws. Because, the criticizer is expressing a better vision of the world they have in mind, but because this is being done to another character, the player can better understand where that criticism comes from. In some ways, it's like making an argument in nonfiction writing. This probably has its limits in use, like if you criticize a whole list of points you have, it might break the tone of the game, etc.

Rules for Cutscenes

Though this game is taking longer than expected (ha ha ha) one of the tricks I'm using to speed things up are my approach to cutscenes.  For one, in most cutscenes, no characters have animations or move during dialogues. Also, I'm focusing more on letting the environments and textures do the 'atmosphere', rather than make moving characters that emote, etc. This means I can use a few camera angles in the dialogue if needed (focus on particular characters, etc.) 

Characters

As you can see, there's a human figure in one of the pictures. I'm using MakeHuman and then posing/texturing in blender with gradients. This lets me make expressive static poses for short dialogues. I noticed that humans look really odd against unrealisticly proportioned environments, and this is not an effect I want, so I am using a trick from SMT Nocturne, where NPCs appear as glowing orbs, then their silhouettes fade in when talking to them. 

I think it's little things like this that can help contribute to the memorability and uniqueness of a game. This process is a little excessive even for me, but I think it's worth the effort to have NPCs appear and their poses express their function in the game.

I'll also be hiring a friend for portraits of the main characters, possibly full-body, for extra expression via fashion/posing/expression. The models in game will remain basic ragdolls + gradients, though.

Music

I started another song this week. Most of the songs in this game are on the ambient side... so a lot of time is spent on finding precisely the right sounds. Though I'm hoping to fit in some melody-driven songs here and there.

Areas

The second picture is an in-progress area. I can't say much, but I am going for a method of 'minimal expression' - that is, an area + camera angles that photograph well, focus on being feasible within the game world, but not filled with too much extra texture or modeling detail. Like, that area will be filled in with more level geometry, but there will not be a lot (or any?) far-off structures, etc. This is also a trick I'm using to save time in development.

There's another area I won't show, but I had prototype versions of them and worked on finalizing their geometry and texturing. I've been using a terrain tool, and reducing the terrain detail/heightmap resolution, as well as increasing the pixel error, so that the geometry of the hills are a little more blocky. The default setting of the terrain tool creates like, 2-4 MB terrain, and you end up with reallly smooth and awkward terrain. Changing those settings  also reduces terrain sizes to ~ <100kb.

Anyways, it's nice to have some final-feeling areas connected up.

Saving

I've intentionally put this off for a while until I was fairly confident how it would slot into the game, but now that I'm further along, I worked on the saving/loading code.

 All the game does is save a string of event flags, player position, current scene, and in a separate file, some configuration settings.  I like avoiding things like having parts of a world be serialized or saved, because that can be needlessly complex. I'll probably work on a save menu later this weekend - nothing complex.

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