Accepting Collection Requests Posted: 02 Feb 2022 10:38 PM PST In the past 6 hours, users of desktop New Reddit may notice some posts have a list that appears on the left. This is the Collections feature available for mods only, but viewable by everyone. Essentially, Collection groups multiple posts under a single thread. Whenever viewing a post in a Collection, all other post in the same Collection will be listed. Some Collection examples: If you want your posts to be grouped together in a Collection, chat to me, and follow the format written below: Request a new Collection: - "New Collection, please."
- Name of the Collection
- Description of the Collection (optional)
- Type of Collection: List type (recommended for text and poll posts) or gallery type (recommended for photographic print and videos).
- List of post links in order. Add numbering before the links.
Request posts added to an existing Collection: - "Collection addition, please."
- Name of Collection
- List of posts (in link) to be added in order. Add numbering before the links. Start at 1; no need to remember how many posts the Collection already have.
Notes: - Posts must have relevance to each other. Collection with random posts will be rejected.
- A Collection is r/AceAttorney -wide. It is not restricted to a single user.
- Deleted Collections does not remove the posts; it only removes the grouping of the posts. Posts still remain as is.
- Viewers may opt to be notified whenever some posts were added in a Collection.
submitted by /u/DBClass407 [link] [comments] |
Found some new appreciation for the series :) Posted: 03 Feb 2022 01:11 AM PST As I longterm Ace Attorney fan, I've finally decided to make my own little spinoff of like 4 chapters. It's not something I'm planning to release but the entire process has made appreciate the AA series even more because I've finally understood how much work an AA game is: - Creating new characters is goddamn hard. Apart from the fact that designing characters overall is pretty fun even if it's very time consuming, animating them and giving them an individual voices (in dialogue and monologue) and plot line is very time consuming and really difficult at times. An average AA game has about 40 to 50 different characters. You have to design them, animate all of them and make them interesting enough for players/readers to care while you make sure they stay unique (that means unique actions and unique dialogue). Try to come up with 40 different characters that you can easily differentiate. It's anything but easy.
- Music. Writing music is so tedious. I mean I'm not a musician. How many times have I just simply sat at my piano, staring at it? Don't get me wrong once you have an inspiration, it's fun. However writing music for a game or for anything really is different. You can't just wait for inspiration to hit you. You need to create but if there is not spark, how do you create? It's also hard to express yourself through music. Will you be able to make the listener understand? Does it set the mood? Does it suit the scene?
- Writing itself. Writing is probably what I've done the most out of all these. However 200,000 words is no small deed. It's a lot and that's the average AA game (accoording to Google at least). Keeping it interesting on purely technical level such as word choice is soo hard. And AA is also purely dialogue, so you need to transfer all information through dialogue (and a tiny bit of monologue). This also puts a greater emphasis on unique voices.
- Creating cases is more difficult than I thought. I love detective games and as someone who has played so many, I thought that I was gonna be great at crafting these scenarios but no I'm not. I've lost counts how many times the cases had to be changed or needed to be redone almost entirely for them to be actually challenging. I've got an entire white board full of ideas. I talked to people to get feedback on whether or not they'd be able to solve it with the hints that have been given and more often than not people are. So you have to make it more difficult, more complicated. Give out red herrings. Make the protagonist misunderstand. Leave out information. It's really, really hard.
submitted by /u/Hoppeditz [link] [comments] |
Does anyone has a code of Godot as Diego Armando for objection.lol? Posted: 03 Feb 2022 03:47 AM PST |
Sub/Dub if later Ace Attorney games were anime adapted Posted: 03 Feb 2022 03:30 AM PST If the later Ace Attorney games were adapted into anime, who would you see voicing the characters introduced in subbed and dubbed. For example: I could see Sean Chiplock voicing Apollo Justice and Todd Haberkorn voicing either Kristoph or Nahyuta. What do you think? submitted by /u/tehslaywiz [link] [comments] |
Wrightworth shippers, get a load of this Posted: 02 Feb 2022 03:33 PM PST |
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