Was wondering if anyone has already built an engine/library/module for using storylets in Love2d...
I was thinking about using something similar to storylets in my upcoming game Monster Heart. Basically, I wanted a dynamic narrative that would evolve and react to the player's actions and various world states. I was thinking something like, the player and NPC's all have variables that hold both overall story position (chapter, etc), as well as character emotional states, subplots, and various events and happenings (a new monster arrives at the island, it's raining, the player's character hasn't gotten enough sleep this week), and that it would also effect the player's response texts and game choices in conversations.
Realizing someone else had probably already done this, I took a look around and discovered the idea of storylets. It's mostly in use in the interactive fiction community, so there are a lot of Inform, AGS, and Twine extensions and modules that do this, but I wasn't sure if anyone had done something similar already in Love2d...
My meager searches around the net and the forum haven't really led to any results. Just wondering if anyone here has seen anything like that...
If not, I'll end up building a general use one for myself that I'll probably post around here.
Storylets and Love2d
Re: Storylets and Love2d
I am not aware of such lib, but try here:
https://github.com/love2d-community/awesome-love2d
https://github.com/love2d-community/awesome-love2d
My boat driving game demo: https://dusoft.itch.io/captain-bradley- ... itius-demo
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Re: Storylets and Love2d
Thanks! I looked through it, nothing that is specifically made to do this, but I think I can combine a few modules to get the effect I need.
Re: Storylets and Love2d
Sure, don't forget to share / post on Github, if you feel it can be useful to others.pauljessup wrote: ↑Fri Feb 03, 2023 4:28 pm Thanks! I looked through it, nothing that is specifically made to do this, but I think I can combine a few modules to get the effect I need.
My boat driving game demo: https://dusoft.itch.io/captain-bradley- ... itius-demo
Re: Storylets and Love2d
Nice, I had never heard of the term 'storylet' before, seems like a nice solution.
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Re: Storylets and Love2d
Hey, yeah! That was the Emily Short blog that led me down the storylet rabbithole. It is a nice solution, I'm still working on it, getting it to fire off different storylets based on various world variables/stats/etc. It's kind of interesting and robust. Right now, my code is pretty much for this engine only, not sure if it would work if I moved it outside for others to use as a library/module. But maybe in the future I can abstract it enough for any Love or Lua users
Re: Storylets and Love2d
I'm not exactly clear on storylets. Is the basic concept not to use a rigid tree structure to store and progress a story, but to present events based on a 'soup' of various variables stored in player and world state?
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Re: Storylets and Love2d
Yes, so it's basically a systemic, open world style of game but applied to narrative. It allows you to co-create a story with the player based on player's actions in worlds, rather than a simple dialogue tree.
So, for example, it's raining, the character visits the ruins, an NPC is only there, when it rains, and thus it changes the interaction. If the player was mean to the character or nice in the past, it will change the interaction, etc. All of these interactions add up to little stories that can interweave with each other, and make for interesting, surprising narratives, with some even being unplanned by the game creator.
So, for example, it's raining, the character visits the ruins, an NPC is only there, when it rains, and thus it changes the interaction. If the player was mean to the character or nice in the past, it will change the interaction, etc. All of these interactions add up to little stories that can interweave with each other, and make for interesting, surprising narratives, with some even being unplanned by the game creator.
Re: Storylets and Love2d
OK, I think I understand. I'm thinking about implementation details too, of course.
So NPCs respond to a limited set of world state variables, and what they say is selected based on the NPC's internal state as well as these external 'world state' variables, and not a pre-defined dialog tree of responses. So I suppose part of the NPC's internal state could track your conversation so far, and so a loosely-defined dialog tree could also be implemented in this system. or a collection of small, fragmented dialog trees depending on world state.
So NPCs respond to a limited set of world state variables, and what they say is selected based on the NPC's internal state as well as these external 'world state' variables, and not a pre-defined dialog tree of responses. So I suppose part of the NPC's internal state could track your conversation so far, and so a loosely-defined dialog tree could also be implemented in this system. or a collection of small, fragmented dialog trees depending on world state.
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Re: Storylets and Love2d
Sort of, it's kind of like breaking away from dialogue trees, and think about it more like firing events like in Visual C++. So, according world states, a story event happens in the background, and then effects the NPC and how they speak to the player, but also, how the player's dialogue choices appear as well. It can create some interesting stuff,and even have interacting/overlapping stories that the player experiences that you probably didn't even plan.
The downside is, there is a bit more writing (though not as much with dialogue trees, which can get messy and spiral out of control very easily) and there might be quite a few things that you put into the game that a player doesn't experience. I know some devs don't like that last bit, personally I don't mind. I think it makes each experience special to the player.
The downside is, there is a bit more writing (though not as much with dialogue trees, which can get messy and spiral out of control very easily) and there might be quite a few things that you put into the game that a player doesn't experience. I know some devs don't like that last bit, personally I don't mind. I think it makes each experience special to the player.
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