As we know, The Last Birdling alternates between Bimonia and Tayo’s perspectives. Today, I would like to explore some of the details behind this system.
The Last Birdling is written from a first person perspective, so the viewpoint character’s personality will come through in everything she observes. Her inner thoughts, reactions, they are all distinctly her own. On paper, or on screen in our case, this means different word choices as well as sentence structures.
That said, I despise making characters act a certain way just to showcase their uniqueness. If you study writing books, you will often be advised to make every character sound different, to a point where you can tell who is speaking even without dialogue tags.
Now, imagine a group of your friends. If you closed your eyes, and they all had the same voice, would you be able to tell them apart? I for one would have a hard time. For me, being truthful takes priority above all rules.
Since we are in a visual medium, we may as well take advantage of that when it comes to perspective shifts. Notice how the UI changes to green in the screenshot below:
This means we have switched to Tayo’s perspective in chapter two. The same concept applies to decision points:
In the world of traditional novels, shifting perspectives mid-scene is ill advised. To avoid disorienting readers, we want to jump into different heads during a scene or chapter break. The Last Birdling does not feature chapter titles, but there are end of scene cards to signal a perspective change:
This introduces several concerns in terms of programming. For instance, if players return to the previous scene, will the UI switch back as expected?
What about loading another saved game mid-session? I hope all the common scenarios have been addressed. We will see if players spot any edge cases after the game’s release.
So why would we alternate between perspectives? Once readers recognize the pattern, it is no longer something they need to worry about, which makes for an ideal reading experience. If the view changes went as follows:
Bimonia, Bimonia, Tayo, Tayo, Tayo, Tayo, Bimonia, Tayo, Bimonia, Bimonia
And so on, gamers would stumble every time we reached a new scene. We want to set up roadblocks for our characters, not our players.
To round things off, The Last Birdling follows the journeys of Bimonia and Tayo from childhood to adolescence. By the time these two reach their teens, they have suffered through an awful lot. To reflect both their physical and mental shifts, the UI will also update accordingly:
Find out more about The Last Birdling via:
http://birdlng.invertmouse.com
The website contains a demo version, which illustrates how the perspective changes work. Please feel free to have a look.
Thank you for reading ːyoyoː!
The Last Birdling
InvertMouse
InvertMouse
2017-08-31
Singleplayer
Game News Posts 23
🎹🖱️Keyboard + Mouse
Very Positive
(56 reviews)
http://birdling.invertmouse.com
https://store.steampowered.com/app/629430 
The Game includes VR Support
The Last Birdling Linux [1.05 G]
The Last Birdling - Digital artbook
One day, Bimonia meets Tayo, a human child hunting in the forest. Bimonia fails to kill Tayo, and they instead become friends. Mother will be furious if she finds out, or worse, this relationship may cause tension between the two species to erupt.
The Last Birdling explores Bimonia and Tayo's fight for their friendship as the world threatens to tear them apart.
* * *
Unhack, the first game created under the InvertMouse name, was produced in 2012. That means The Last Birdling happens to be my fifth anniversary project. This game is a culmination of all the lessons I have learned through the past five years. Now, I would like to share with you several features available in The Last Birdling:
Dual perspectives:
The Last Birdling alternates between Bimonia and Tayo's perspectives. Follow their journeys from childhood to adolescence as they struggle to maintain their friendship against all odds.
Multiple endings
There are 21 decisions to make throughout Bimonia and Tayo's journeys. Depending on their resolve, this story will conclude in one of five ways. Use the progress tracker to determine how to obtain every ending.
Glossary
Dive into The Last Birdling's lore through the glossary page. Throughout your journey, you will find links that take you to relevant entries.
* * *
Thank you! I hope you will find the experience worthwhile.
- OS: 1.2 GHz Pentium 4
- Processor: Any 64 bit processorMemory: 2 GB RAM
- Memory: 2 GB RAM
- Graphics: 1920 x 1080
- Storage: 2 GB available space
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