The only things I ask are that you don't alter the main plot, do NOT make my SFW scripts NSFW, and don’t add anything racist/sexist/homophobic/transphobic/etc. You can make any changes to the script as you see fit, including (but not limited to) character names, pronouns, the flow of dialogue, sound effects, ect. Anyways thank you for reading and I hope you enjoy! Plus I wanted to make more wholesomeness because my heart is a sucker for stuff like this. As for this script I wanted to show the human and giant(ess) bonding and learning more about each other. I have some Halloween scripts I want to get published in early October and that will take priority. But I did get an idea and now this script that was supposed to be a one-off will become a trilogy :P As with part 2 I can't promise part 3 will come right away. As disaster was about to strike, a group of survivors transmigrated into a desolated world and were challenged to a game of survival. Chapter 764 - Four Teams, the Eve of Chaos Part 1. I knew I wanted to make a sequel to part 1 of this script, but I wasn't exactly sure what I wanted to do at the time. My Post-Apocalyptic Shelter Levels Up Infinitely. It's a great sequence and, although the crocodile AI was a bit iffy, it still made for some tense moments.Part 1 SCRIPT HERE-approximately 1400 words You can see the ridges of the crocs as they swim and, together with the pressure of your herd's slow speed, you need some well-timed walking to get to safety. One dangerous path that I enjoyed had me guide my herd through treacherous waters swarming with crocodiles, finding safety on small islands that had been dotted throughout the area. The idea sounded pretty cool in concept, only for the tiger AI to keep appearing out of nowhere, with no visual warning, and kill one of the calves as soon as I stepped into the area. Another one was described as the "striped death" where you have to keep the herd together to protect your calves from a tiger. In one area, the challenge was to make it across a blistering desert where there was little food, only for me to run through it and get to safety in no time at all. Out of the different paths you can choose, the ones that hint at danger are not that perilous at all. It just didn't feel like a journey where my choices mattered. It also didn't help that at each checkpoint, I would always get the same choices regardless of the one I picked before. I continually kept running into dead ends and accidentally wandering into dangerous areas that were meant for different chosen pathways. The layout of the world is also confusing. The issue with these points is that many of them took me anywhere but forward-some of them making me backtrack on myself, which feels almost counterintuitive in a game about a nomad group where you have to keep pushing forward. You can keep track of the next checkpoint by using your 'elephant sense', which makes the screen go dark and illuminates the next environmental destination represented by a symbol. Other hiccups I experienced were the nursing command for my calf not working and checkpoints from old runs appearing in new games. With the AI constantly misbehaving, it almost felt like I had to deal with a group of naughty schoolchildren. You need to charge into a tree to knock down hanging fruit, making them fall onto the ground, but the AI repeatedly did not register that food was there, which, in a survival game, was frustrating. There were also problems with getting them to eat the fruit that I had found. Clipping was a constant issue, and the elephants would regularly catch on environmental areas, forcing me to maneuver my elephant so that they would follow me and unclip themselves. But, as pretty as the world is, problems start to reveal themselves straight from the get-go.īut, as pretty as the world is, problems start to reveal themselves straight from the get-goĪlthough I had no issues controlling my elephant, I ran into multiple problems with the AI of the herd. Environments are lovely to travel through and since you're not playing as a predator you can happily frolic with wildebeest, rhino, and antelope without fear of them attacking you. You'll have your fair share of bamboo forests, scorching deserts, and watering holes to navigate through, and one section has you lead the herd through a mountain cave and emerge at a luscious lagoon on the other side.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |