Editing Unused & Removed Features/DTL3
From Drawn to Life Wiki
Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
| Latest revision | Your text | ||
| Line 198: | Line 198: | ||
</tabber>}} | </tabber>}} | ||
| − | In one of the more mysterious cases of unused content, hidden in the game files is at least one unused emotive sprite for every enemy in [[Drawn to Life: Two Realms]] that appears in the overworld map for [[Rapoville]] at night. These sprites are named "ENEMYNAME_angry" internally, outside of [[Hermit Crab]]'s second emotive sprite, titled "HermitCrab_happy" internally. | + | In one of the more mysterious cases of unused content, hidden in the game files is at least one unused emotive sprite for every enemy in [[Drawn to Life: Two Realms]] that appears in the overworld map for [[Rapoville]] at night. These sprites are named "ENEMYNAME_angry" internally, outside of [[Hermit Crab]]'s second emotive sprite, titled "HermitCrab_happy" internally. Some of these sprites were repurposed frames from previous games; for example, both of Hermit Crab's emotive sprites were cut down versions of it's stunned sprites from [[Drawn to Life: The Next Chapter]]. |
All four enemy NPCs added via the Creative Pack - [[Cumulus]], [[Kuragekko]], [[Seedlee]] & [[Taz]] - were discovered to have been included in the files of the base game, which may indicate that these enemies were intended to be included at the start. This may explain why they each have emotive sprites like the rest despite them being unused, but it is currently unknown what purpose these sprites would've had in the game, or why these sprites were left unused. It is believed that these could have been used when the dialogue prompting an Imagination Battle is triggered prior to completion, or perhaps that the Toys themselves could have used the same enemy sprite style as the [[Drawn to Life|previous]] [[Drawn to Life: The Next Chapter|games]], with the emotive sprites acting as hurt sprites. Both of these points are merely speculation, however. | All four enemy NPCs added via the Creative Pack - [[Cumulus]], [[Kuragekko]], [[Seedlee]] & [[Taz]] - were discovered to have been included in the files of the base game, which may indicate that these enemies were intended to be included at the start. This may explain why they each have emotive sprites like the rest despite them being unused, but it is currently unknown what purpose these sprites would've had in the game, or why these sprites were left unused. It is believed that these could have been used when the dialogue prompting an Imagination Battle is triggered prior to completion, or perhaps that the Toys themselves could have used the same enemy sprite style as the [[Drawn to Life|previous]] [[Drawn to Life: The Next Chapter|games]], with the emotive sprites acting as hurt sprites. Both of these points are merely speculation, however. | ||
| Line 570: | Line 570: | ||
}} | }} | ||
</tabber>}} | </tabber>}} | ||
| − | On the websites for both Chern Fai and Justine Raymond, early mockups of both Draw and Build Mode can be found. Unlike the final game, three of these utilized a sprite-based design style, much like the previous games. The mockup of Build Mode on Raymond's portfolio | + | On the websites for both Chern Fai and Justine Raymond, early mockups of both Draw and Build Mode can be found. Unlike the final game, three of these utilized a sprite-based design style, much like the previous games. The mockup of Build Mode on Raymond's portfolio used the raster style the game used, albeit as a much simpler depiction of the UI. It is unknown why the initial UI style was changed, however the number of pixel-based assets being unused may indicate it was abandoned early on in development. |
{{BR|Clear}} | {{BR|Clear}} | ||
| Line 578: | Line 578: | ||
Interestingly, the clip contains a [https://clideo.com/ Clideo] watermark. This may indicate that this service was used to compile the video files seen in the final game, with the watermarked version indicating a trial version was also used at one point. | Interestingly, the clip contains a [https://clideo.com/ Clideo] watermark. This may indicate that this service was used to compile the video files seen in the final game, with the watermarked version indicating a trial version was also used at one point. | ||
| − | |||
| − | |||
| − | |||
| − | |||
| − | |||
| − | |||
{{BR|Clear}} | {{BR|Clear}} | ||