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Adding storylines to scenarios and campaigns


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3 hours ago, Stan` said:

 

I came across this a while ago, I have yet to try it out, but it looks fantastic. It's one of the things that I'd like to pick up or help with, if only I had more time.

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On 17/05/2025 at 1:28 PM, ShadowOfHassen said:

Offhand, do both.

Alright, that's what I'll do, likely starting with the parchment overlay. There's some other stuff I have to finish first, but I will get to this soon.

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  • 4 weeks later...

I need some help with naming. How should one instance of the story parchment overlay, text and image together, be called in the game? E.g. for the button tooltip: "Switch to the next/previous ______". Something like a "chapter", but shorter than that.

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17 hours ago, Vantha said:

I need some help with naming. How should one instance of the story parchment overlay, text and image together, be called in the game? E.g. for the button tooltip: "Switch to the next/previous ______". Something like a "chapter", but shorter than that.

Some further possible names:

  • Story
  • Topic
  • Page
  • Subject
  • Point
  • Item
  • Line
  • Aspect
  • Article
  • Episode
  • Saga
  • Poem
  • Epic (my favourite at the moment)
  • Book (too large, but nice and short)

An if you build it like the Iliad or an old Saga: 

  • Verse
  • Line
  • Saw that might be in ancient Greek στίχος (stichos)

 

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An issue may be to match the character and style of the text to that naming convention. If it was a "page", "item" or "point" then it would refer to more sober academic style, while naming it "epic","verse" or the like it would require a bit more stylish language. And that might need to be adapted to the respective subject and region, e.g. are we talking about something in ancient Greece or Rome, or in a Britannic, Indian, Persian or East Asian environment. 

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  • 2 months later...
  • 2 weeks later...

I want to implement a system for unit speech/dialogue in cutscenes next, inspired by that mockup. 


Should I add a "next" button (to the bottom right probably) for the player to click through the dialogue themselves? Or always switch to the next line after a set amount of time, like a predefined cutscene? How do other games do it?

It would of course be possible to provide both options and leave the choice up to campaign makers. Could that be worth it? Or would one option of those two be always be preferred anyway?

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My preference would a "next" button - just in case you are a bit distracted or it takes a bit longer to read, then you might miss that page. Also, if you introduce a preset timeout, there will be arguments both to reduce it and to increase it depending on whom you ask.  Making that "next" a user decision avoids these discussions.

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