I have a separate file with dialogue-content, and when I call the intro, like this:
Code: Select all
# this is the dialogue-file
init python:
dialogue_fP_intro = ["{i}Hi! I'm [fP], and this is the story of what happens this summer. Did that come out a little stilted? I felt that it did. Oh, well, I'm not that well versed in being a narrator. Hence, I will mostly conduct this in a first-person perspective - you know, \"Hi, I'm [fP] and you're about to be taken for a wild ride!\" That sound good? {b}GREAT!{/b}{/i}",
"{i}Now, where were we? Oh, right. Yeah. This summer. You know, the one you're gonna be playing through? So much have happened, I don't even really know where to start. Hmm... Maybe May? Or... no, I think we'll have to go all the way back to April, actually. You see, I was attending my last high-school semester. Grinding away, trying to get my grades up that last bit, all the while trying not to become a total geek.{/i}",
]
dialogue_fP = ['So. I wake up on April 1st, trying to get my wits about me, and figuring out what I wanna do with the day. Then, shellshocked, and after that trying to figure out how to get the image of my naked sister off my mind. I decided spending the day working on my bike would be as good a way as any...'
]
dialogue_fM = [
["[fP]! Wake UP!",
"[fP]! Get out of bed THIS INSTANT!"
]
]
# this is how I call the dialogue_fP_intro:
python:
for i in dialogue_fP_intro:
renpy.say(fP,i)
# this renders the [fP] and such fine
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fM "[dialogue_fM[0][0]]"
fP "uuuhh..."
fM "[dialogue_fM[0][1]]"