![]() ![]() I'm very happy that more people are using alloy, nice! If you have any trouble I'll post my txt files here so you can see what I have written on there, maybe that'll help. that I don't really know what else to say on this topic. You have to be aware that I've had problems with the premium UI after changing the file names, I have lines that go through the UI as you can see here. Like you I tried to look for and and couldn't find it but replacing, , and seems to work fine for me. I've posted images proving it worked for me earlier in this thread.Ībout another thread saying it doesn't, I have no idea what thread you're talking about so I can't speak to it but it works for me so I would disagree with the idea that it's *impossible*. I can't speak for mapoot but I assume it worked for him and it definitely worked for me. Also I can not even find the last two parameters you changed GRAPHICS_FONT GRAPHICS_FULLFONT Originally posted by mapoot:if you're still struggling, have you tried changing all of the following e.g.Īt first I changed only the first two and had the same issue as you, it wasn't until I added basic and graphics font settings that it was resolvedĮDIT: btw, thanks for the recommendation on alloy in this thread, I'm using it now B)ĭid this make square tilesets work? Another similar thread says it is impossible right now. have no idea why it works for me if other people are having problems. Right after a tribe of cave fish attacked my food and clothing workshops/stockpiles. Here is some screenshots of my game so you can see what I mean. The one issue I have is that the premium UI is completely broken when I have every font in d_init set to alloy, it only works for the classic UI. Alloy is probably the best curse tileset in my opinion.Ībout the "O"s looking like "C"s. I appreciate your kind words, I tried so many tilesets after I couldn't get over the not square squares that the default curses offers. It seems to me that the init file assumes the tileset won't be square, which is such a crazy backwards leap from where we were before. So the O's used for castles in the world map look like C's for example. However, unfairly high US healthcare prices recently motivated them to begin updating it to appeal to more mainstream players.Originally posted by rory_rory_rory:It looks like the tiles are being truncated horizontally when using alloy curses 12x12 (my favourite tileset by the way, clearly you are also a person of refined taste). The game's unbelievably rich systems have been in development by brothers Tarn and Zach Adams since 2002, and they've long been content to give the game away for free while leaving it up to players to mod it if the ASCII art was too ugly for them. Granted, graphic packs that overhaul the game's messy ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange, the way in which text is encoded on computers) art style have long been available unofficially, but anyone who installs the game on Steam right now will still be greeted by an arcane world of symbols representing geography, resources, enemies, and their misadventurous dwarven charges. The always-improving game's near-incomprehensible text art has long been many players' main obstacle into mining deeper into the ore-rich mountain that it Dwarf Fortress, and now they're getting their chance at last. One of the most complex video games ever made, Dwarf Fortress, is finally replacing its signature ASCII art with tiles that resemble actual graphics, and it looks so, so much better than before. ![]()
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