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With and Without Pigment Bleed Screenshots Jodie | 6/2/2016 | 9 | I still find it amazing how a pigment bleed mutation can make parts that normally look rather out of place, fit in perfectly with the rest of the body. This is an example of the power of pigment bleeds. |
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I sadly lost them after my old laptop died... But I will try and recreate them. ^^
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Zaf | 7/13/2016
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| Wish I could download them. Would love to have them in my game.
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Now I finally know what pigment bleed does. So what does pigment swap (?) do?
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Pigment bleed has nothing to do with spriting. It's a genetic thing. It's also very easy to edit. You just find the genes labeled Pigment Bleed and move the sliders around.
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I'd like to do pigment bleed in a breed I'm making but I don't know how. I don't really even know how to sprite.
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I thought it said "pregnant bleed" for a moment.
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I think they are both beautiful, but I love how the colours seem to just match up, even though they normally are different colours. It makes it seem a bit more natural than just having the parts other breeds dropped on them.
The pigment bleeded Ettins still produce ones without the bleed, and the ones with the bleed still produce ones with the pigment bleed, regardless if the mate has the bleed or not, so it adds some more diversity among my Ettin colony.
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It's because it's changing the color of the actual sprites rather than overlaying color. It can definitely be useful but I still use the main pigment genes too because you can get a lot more shades out of the bleed that way. Though I have to say in that case the brown and green looked fine together in the bleedless animal.
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