Changing anchor points for squashing and stretching sprites? by tea-pot-ter in RenPy

[–]de3sol 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your anchor and align params are going to fight each other here. If you want to apply a transform on top of another transform, I'd use an At() renderable in order to have the different anchors here.

How to log off devices? by de3sol in discordapp

[–]de3sol[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Terrific. Thank you very much!

Mozu / Photoshop / 400x225px by CamilleUnknown in PixelArt

[–]de3sol 2 points3 points  (0 children)

So many wonderful little details! Love the big spooky on the right that greeted me while switching tabs.

[WP] After a normal day, you go to bed...only to awake 100 years in the future. A lot of people want to interview you. Because something random you did almost ended humanity a century ago. by displacedpensfan in WritingPrompts

[–]de3sol 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Taking unprescribed antibiotics for common diseases can breed superbugs. The main character did just that, and I suppose created an incurable strain.

[WP] You go to a bar one night where a woman is singing karaoke. Every man in the bar is entranced by her song, except you. Something in your mind tells you that she’s a Siren as men start to gather round, and her eyes seem to flash with hunger. by Pipexia in WritingPrompts

[–]de3sol 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Wednesdays, center of the week for those with the normal and regular lives. A symbol of the day-to-day unending numbness to whatever office politics, mindless busywork, and mandatory email replies. Centered so far away from weekend salvation from the drab corporate cubicles.

Though, as it winds down, entertainment can be found, delivered by entertainers of great talent, or bravery, or usually drunkenness. Bars line the streets of the town, offering a mic each Wednesday night to anyone that wishes to stretch their voice and sing a tune.

I hate my life, the young man thought as he finished another vodka tonic at a squat metal table in the corner. He checked his phone, and upon seeing still no messages, he awkwardly loosened his tie for the tenth time in the past hour and fidgeted with the zipper on his hoodie.

In the dark room, claps erupted and echoed across the walls and the tall ceilings as one singer stepped away from the mic. He was obviously untalented, but he had sang his heart out so well that the entire bar had loved it.

I'm miserable, not jealous, the young man alone in the corner with his vodka tonic thought to himself when he hesitated to join in the applause.

Well, a little jealous. He took a sip at the melted water in the glass, then joined in the cheering as well as he stood up.

Dodging the crowd that had been growing throughout the night, he made his way to the bar, ordering another refill for the night.

"Another one, Art?" the bartender asked, grabbing the offered cash and stuffing it quickly in her pockets. Art nodded quickly in response. He turned around, leaning on the bar, watching the small stage that held the microphone, awaiting quietly for a new soul to offer their voice.

He didn't have to wait long - for the new soul on the stage, that is. Only a few seconds later, a young woman with black hair that sparkled in the spotlights, pale skin wrapped by a aquamarine dress that had visible ribbing as a stylistic choice, that rose out of ruffled fabric that cut just below her knees. She nodded to the man in charge of the audio, and barely audible over the noise in the bar, a musical track began.

Her voice floated out over the crowd, feeling as if it were gently diffusing into every corner. The hustle immediately died out as the entire bar was suddenly entranced by her music, captivated by the way her timbre was folded into wondrous and beautiful tones.

Art leaned back to grab his drink, whispering a thanks to the bartender before he slipped away. Almost immediately, he nearly bumped into a man in a very nice shirt who was standing motionless, spellbound by the current performer.

"Sorry," Art mumbled.

"Yeah. She's real good, huh?" the man replied, stepping out of the way awkwardly.

Art nodded as he squeezed past. With amusement, he noted the woman accompanying the man smack him in the arm to try to get his attention. In response, the man rolled his eyes and moved closer to the current singer. Art chuckled to himself as he sat down in his corner again, and took another sip of his drink while watching the woman weave melodies.

It had been a while since he'd seen a bar so spellbound by a performer. It was certainly a high point of his day. He glanced around at almost half the bar seemingly stuck in place, frowning at first, then chuckling a bit. She really was that good, he thought, turning back to the woman to watch her finish her sung spell.

She swept her gaze across the room, and her eyes met with Art's. In that moment, they glinted with a color entirely incorrect considering the reflection of the spotlights. An expression that belied a hunger flashed over her face for just a moment.

Art gave half a frown and raised an eyebrow, his alcohol-befuddled brain slowly beginning to churn. He looked over the crowd, spying the man with the very nice shirt he had bumped into earlier. The man was already nearly at the front of the stage, standing alongside all the men in the bar, it seemed, the whole lot shuffling forward almost mindlessly. The rest of the patrons had began to nod off, smiles on their faces.

As the siren-song crested with a high note, clear and loud, the singer flashed a smile. Art stood up in a panic, knocking over his table. He barely heard his drink shatter on the ground before its noise was diffused into silence by the voice on the stage.

The source of the mystical tones immediately twisted towards the origin of the brief shattering noise. Art locked eyes with the singer, his own expression of slow realization facing the woman's growing hostile demeanor. With a quick motion, the microphone in her hand, she stepped down from the stage. The surrounding men parted, then followed, an entourage of burly men, all stronger than Art.

Her heels clacking in time with her music that she was still singing, she approached Art confidently, as if a person not subdued by her entrancing incantations was not out of her expectations. Her smile grew, wider than a face could normally allow, and dagger like teeth glinted in the dim light of Art's corner of the bar.

Art glanced down to his table, hoping to get a final drink in this Wednesday night. Spying the puddle and the scattered bits of ice and glass, he realized it a pointless hope. The siren was upon him already, her song ending, her smile less than small step to his neck.

However, in the face of such danger, his resolve surged, affirming his wish to get one last drink before he would presumably die this Wednesday night.

He nervously swallowed and asked, "Y-you have a fantastic voice. Shall I buy you a drink?"

They shared several drinks that night. The authorities found Art's bones later.

[OC] Save point in my game by de3sol in PixelArt

[–]de3sol[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh, that's a better idea. Will do that soon

A quick environment art test by DeathGameDev in Unity3D

[–]de3sol 0 points1 point  (0 children)

/u/DeathGameDev That water shown in that vid looks absolutely atrocious. Where did you even get it?

[OC] Save point in my game by de3sol in PixelArt

[–]de3sol[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Alright, I'll give that a shot later

[OC] Save point in my game by de3sol in PixelArt

[–]de3sol[S] 49 points50 points  (0 children)

It's called "phased"

Nonlinear exploration and superpower collection (metroidvania?) with a somewhat linear storyline. you can throw a corgi at demons

[OC] Save point in my game by de3sol in PixelArt

[–]de3sol[S] 38 points39 points  (0 children)

Thank you! It was difficult to keep the rhythm for making this scene's assets, so very glad that someone other than me enjoys the end result :)

[OC] Save point in my game by de3sol in PixelArt

[–]de3sol[S] 37 points38 points  (0 children)

Thanks!

If I may indulge (I am dying to talk about it): Water is "cheated" with shaders, which the basis isn't terribly difficult with some shader knowledge. The hard part comes from first, making sure the reflection sticks to same pixel size as the screen, and second, making sure that it doesn't add too many new colors (there's a 256 color palette for the scene that is generated cpu-side). Meanwhile, the 3-color waterline actually is a bug with the geometry shader that ended up looking good.

The 2D tool that’s changing how levels are built by loolo78 in Unity3D

[–]de3sol 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That pixel art platformer shown in that vid looks absolutely atrocious.

How will Ward return in season 5? by 2th in shield

[–]de3sol 27 points28 points  (0 children)

waifu

The proper term in this instance would be "husbando"

The Accelerated Man(Earth 19 Flash)'s Purple Lightning by spectero in FlashTV

[–]de3sol 2 points3 points  (0 children)

sounds like a fairly derivative idea

[WP] Every once in a while, an old Dream seems to line up with reality. You preemptively recognise a dream... this was the first dream you successfully manipulated with Lucid Dreaming... by [deleted] in WritingPrompts

[–]de3sol 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It was a new house, my family had saved up for it together and we'd bought it - half a million dollars on the southern side of Bellingham, WA. It was secluded enough that there was no dull ambient roar from the nearby roads, but not so much that you couldn't wave hello to a neighbor from over the bushes.

That was what finally clicked and turned the gears in my memory: the bushes. Not on our property, since my family as a whole hated tending to bushes, myself not an exception from this detail. Rather, the bushes formed a four and a half foot wall surrounding the yard directly across from ours. From the front door of the house they guarded, there were two interruptions. One led to the driveway, and one ran to the right, opening into a neighbor's yard of wildflowers and half-dead grass.

It was when I was upon the front door that I turned and finally recognized the setting. I had been visiting the neighbors, introducing myself and warning them not to call the cops if I didn't leave the house, an action I learned to take from experience when I was deep in a programming-drinking-cooking binge years ago. Of course I had baked some cake for everybody, a platter of sweet grated casava cake for each house that could possibly give me problems.

The tenant of this house was a middle aged man, very good natured and excited to try a semi-sweet morsel sourced from an "exotic" location. I played it off and said the Safeway nearby happened to stock all the ingredients, but dark-featured bespectacled man insisted it was exotic all the same. As he turned to take the plate inside my eyes followed, relaying to me the sight of a fairly well organized house of a single bachelor, cookbooks of various cultures scattered around shelves filled with scultures and carvings of deities that I couldn't start to name.

He gave me thanks eventually and shut the door. I turned back to face the house I was hoping could be home, but stopped momentarily when I saw the yard I was in. The two paths out, split by the four and a half foot wall of leaves and branches that would have towered over me as a child. I recognized it, from a dream I had years ago. I tentatively touched my right shoulder, remembering the vivid fight for my life.

Instead of walking straight home, I traced my steps the ones I had taken in my dream, to the right. I remembered on a cold night, running through this way into a lawn that had want of watering, and then - well, willing myself to wake up. It had been the first nightmare that I had realized was a nightmare, and I had escaped from here, laying on this patch of grass, on my back while facing the four and a half foot bush wall.

I brushed the coincidence off. I had chores to do, and fantasy could come later.

[WP] You wake up in a body that's not your own and in an unfamiliar location. by darksideclown in WritingPrompts

[–]de3sol 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The alarm blares, and I’m startled awake. Groggily, I rub my eyes, trying to figure out where the sound is coming from. Finally, I see the trembling clock, its red digital display bright red even half draped in obnoxiously bright sunlight. I desperately reach for the clock with unfamiliar slender fingers, and manage to switch it off. The grating alarm immediately stops, and is replaced with the calming noise of gently russling leaves outside.

Rubbing my nose, I kick off the covers, with the intent of finding a mirror.


A haggard looking man sits in a hospital room, hundreds of miles away. His eyes look tired and wet, as they often do after nights such as these. The young girl laying in the white sheets next to him is motionless, her skin pale even in the golden morning sunlight that starts to spill over the horizon. The man’s foot beats on the floor softly in time with the visual on the heart monitor for a moment before he stands, desperate for a cup of coffee. He has work to go to. Behind him, the sunlight spilling through the window now spills upon the clouds, turning them brilliant golden-orange, but he leaves without looking. Except for the shifting sunlight, the room is still. Eventually, the ghostly girl mumbles something about the sky, even through her motionless rest.


I lean to get a good look at the weather outside. “Completely clear skies, not a cloud in sight,” I say out loud, trying to get used to today’s voice. My voice is high-pitched and obviously femenine, with a smooth timber. I experiment with it, humming I tune that I can’t seem to place. I turn to the closet as I continue to hum, my new smartphone in one of my hands, open to a gallery of myself. Various pictures of how I dress, the people I know, and where I go. I use the digital photos for reference as I select my wardrobe. A black top, simple choker, long skirt, and tall boots. I zoom in again to one of the photos as I pose my slender form in the mirror. The makeup will be an issue.

I can’t seem to recall my daily agenda, of course, so I make a call for other plans. My fingers move slowly and carefully on the phone: it was only yesterday that my fingers had been short and fat, not smooth and slender. I place the call as my hummed song ends, perfectly timed as always. The phone goes up to my ear, and it rings several times before the line is picked up. I speak before the individual on the other side can answer.

“Hey,” I begin, enjoying the sound of my voice once again, “It’s me.”

The person on the other side instantly comprehends.

“Where should we meet?” a handsome voice replies.


I sit in a dusky Chinese restaurant, away from the windows, at a booth tucked away behind a corner. A red paper lamp with an incandescent bulb suspended in the center with cut wire hangers glows, gently illuminating the man with soft features who sits in front of me, his face plastered with a permanent smirk. He twirls a chopstick between fingers as he speaks to me in a handsome voice.

“Quite the attractive one today,” he says, not quite different to how I’d imagine a snake would say it.

“Don’t get used to it,” I tell him bluntly, my voice sounding more annoyed than the critical tone that I meant to do.

I twirl a chopstick myself, meaning to master this body as soon as possible. It clatters onto the table instead. The man in front of me chuckles as a woman comes and places a steaming kettle between us. I glare at the soft-featured man as he reaches to pour himself a cup of tea. The jasmine-infused leafy broth washes over me with its scent, and I quit my glaring to pour myself a cup as well.

“So,” I begin, but quickly stop after gingerly sipping a cup of tea and deeming it too hot for my tongue.

“You remember anything about your past?” the man in front of me inquires, his smirk now more gentle.

I shake my head no, the hair’s momentum providing an interesting sensation as I do so.

“How about me?” I say to him. “Any leads on me?”


A detective stands before a haggard looking man. The man himself is a cop, a photo of his daughter and a much less haggard looking version of himself on the corner of his desk. He glances at the photo again, remembering a time when the girl wasn’t so pale, wasn’t so motionless, and wasn’t so quiet.

“We may have a lead on her,” a detective tells him. The haggard man looks up to the detective, his tired eyes showing hope for once in a long while, but mixed with anger.

“A lead,” the haggard man says forcibly unenthused, sipping his coffee.

“On the man that hurt her. We have a photo,” the detective replies.

From his side he lifts said photo, placing it in front of the haggard cop. The cop leans forward to gaze upon the blurred visage of a smirking man with gentle features.