Speech Bubbles link

Ren'Py supports dialogue that's displayed in speech bubbles, which can be interactively positioned on the screen. This provides an alternative to the textboxes used by ADV-style games, and the full screen dialogue used by NVL-mode.

To use speech bubbles your game, you'll have to define Characters with an image tag, a kind of bubble. For example,

define e = Character(None, image="eileen", kind=bubble) # Eileen
define l = Character(None, image="lucy", kind=bubble)   # Lucy

While a name is supported, in general the speaking character will be implied by the tails of the bubble, so the name can be omitted.

You may then use these characters to write dialogue normally.

To position the balloons, hit shift+B to display the speech bubble editor. For each character that has a speech balloon, this will have two buttons in it.

Pressing the area button will launch the speech bubble editor. This editor lets you drag to select the area where the speech bubble will be placed, on a grid. When you complete the drag, the speech bubble will will change locations.

Pressing the properties buttons will select between sets of properties associated with the speech bubble. For the default speech bubble, the different properties control the position of the speech bubble tail.

Once you've changed the area or properties for a character (or group of characters with the same image tage), those properties remain set until changed again, or until the next scene statement.

When the area or properties are being set on the current line of dialogue, the corresponding line is brighter. If the values are being inherited from a prior line of dialogue or the default, the button is dimmed out. Right clicking on a button will prevent the current line from setting the value.

Retained Bubbles link

Ren'Py supports a mode in which bubbles are retained between lines of dialogue, so they pop up one by one, until the previous bubbles are cleared from the screen. To enable this mode, set a bubble character's retain property to True:

define e = Character(None, image="eileen", kind=bubble, retain=True)

Once that's done, the bubbles will keep popping up. Each bubble will need to be placed individually, so bubbles don't overlap. In the bubble editor, pressing the "(clear retained bubbles)" button will remove all of the retained bubbles from the screen, except for the most recent.

Tips link

The speech bubbles use the same identifiers used by the translation system, see the Translation Tips for more information about them. These identifiers can change if:

  • The text of a line changes.

  • Another line with the same text inside the same label is added or removed.

  • A label before the line is added or removed (however, adding or removing a label with the hide clause will not change the translation identifier).

If you edit a scene, it's suggested that you replay through it to make sure the changes did not affect speech bubble placement.

It's possible to apply transforms to the speech bubble by editing the Bubble Screen.

Configuration Variables link

The speech bubble system is controlled by variables in the bubble namespace, and by the bubble screen and its associated styles.

The bubble namespace contains the following variables:

bubble.db_filename = "bubble.json" link

The database file, stored in the game directory, that contains the speech bubble information.

bubble.cols = 24 link

The granularity of the grid that's used to position and size speech bubbles, in the horizontal direction.

bubble.rows = 24 link

The granularity of the grid that's used to position and size speech bubbles, in the vertical direction.

bubble.default_area = (15, 1, 8, 5) link

This is the default area that speech bubbles are placed in, if no other area is specified. This is a tuple of the form (x, y, w, h), where each value is a number of grid cells.

bubble.properties = { ... } link

These are properties, apart from the area, that can be used to customize the speech bubble. This is a map from the name of a set of proprerties to a dictionary of properties and values. These properties supersede those given to the character, and are then supplied to the bubble screen.

This uses the same prefixing system as Character() does. Properties beginning with window_ have the prefix removed, and are passed to the displayable with id "window" in the bubble screen, which is the bubble itself. Properties with what_ have the prefix removed, and are passed to the displayable with id "what" in the bubble screen, which is the text of the bubble. Properties with who_ are handled similarly, and given to the characters name. Properties with show_ are given as arguments to the bubble screen itself.

In a new game, screens.rpy includes:

define bubble.frame = Frame("gui/bubble.png", 55, 55, 55, 95)

define bubble.properties = {
    "bottom_left" : {
        "window_background" : Transform(bubble.frame, xzoom=1, yzoom=1),
        "window_bottom_padding" : 27,
    },

    "bottom_right" : {
        "window_background" : Transform(bubble.frame, xzoom=-1, yzoom=1),
        "window_bottom_padding" : 27,
    },

    "top_left" : {
        "window_background" : Transform(bubble.frame, xzoom=1, yzoom=-1),
        "window_top_padding" : 27,
    },

    "top_right" : {
        "window_background" : Transform(bubble.frame, xzoom=-1, yzoom=-1),
        "window_top_padding" : 27,
    },
}

The bubble.frame variable is just used to make defining bubble.properties easier. Then for each of the four styles of bubble, the bubble is flipped so the tail is in the right place, and the padding is adjusted to leave room for the tail.

bubble.properties_order = [ ] link

This is a list of the names of the sets of properties, in the order they should be cycled through in the speech bubble editor. If the names of the sets of properties are not given, the properties are cycled through in alphabetical order.

bubble.properties_callback = None link

If not None, this should be a function that takes an image tag, and returns a list or tuple of property names that should be used for that image tag, in the order those names should be cycled through. This takes precendence over bubble.properties_order, and can be used to customize the list of bubble properties by character.

bubble.expand_area = { ... } link

This is a map from the name of a set of properties to a (left, top, right, bottom) tuple. If found in this set, the area of the speech bubble is expanded by the given number of pixels.

This makes the speech bubble bigger than the area the creator dragged out. The intent is that this can be used to drag out the body of the speech bubble without concern for the tail, and also for the text itself to stay put when the set of properties is changed and the tail moves.

By default, this is:

define bubble.expand_area = {
    "bottom_left" : (0, 0, 0, 22),
    "bottom_right" : (0, 0, 0, 22),
    "top_left" : (0, 22, 0, 0),
    "top_right" : (0, 22, 0, 0),
}

Bubble Screen link

The default bubble screen can be found in screens.rpy, and is similar to the default say screen:

screen bubble(who, what):
    style_prefix "bubble"

    window:
        id "window"

        if who is not None:

            window:
                id "namebox"
                style "bubble_namebox"

                text who:
                    id "who"

        text what:
            id "what"

It's separate from the say screen as it uses its own set of styles, including bubble_window, bubble_what, bubble_namebox, and bubble_who. These styles can be customized directly to avoid having to set a property in all of the sets of properties in bubble.properties.

If you'd like to apply effects to the speech bubble, you can do so by adding a transform to the bubble screen that accepts the show and hide transform events, like:

screen bubble(who, what):
    style_prefix "bubble"

    window:
        id "window"

        at transform:
            on show:
                alpha 0.0
                linear .5 alpha 1.0

            on hide:
                linear .5 alpha 0.0

        if who is not None:

            window:
                id "namebox"
                style "bubble_namebox"

                text who:
                    id "who"

        text what:
            id "what"

Adding Bubble Support to a Game link

Games made before the release of Ren'Py 8.1 won't include the default screens and settings required for the speech bubble system. There are two things you need to do to fix this. First, download:

And place the files in the game/gui directory of your game. Then, add this to the end of screens.rpy:

## Bubble screen ###############################################################
##
## The bubble screen is used to display dialogue to the player when using
## speech bubbles. The bubble screen takes the same parameters as the say
## screen, must create a displayable with the id of "what", and can create
## displayables with the "namebox", "who", and "window" ids.
##
## https://www.renpy.org/doc/html/bubble.html#bubble-screen

screen bubble(who, what):
    style_prefix "bubble"

    window:
        id "window"

        if who is not None:

            window:
                id "namebox"
                style "bubble_namebox"

                text who:
                    id "who"

        text what:
            id "what"

style bubble_window is empty
style bubble_namebox is empty
style bubble_who is default
style bubble_what is default

style bubble_window:
    xpadding 30
    top_padding 5
    bottom_padding 5

style bubble_namebox:
    xalign 0.5

style bubble_who:
    xalign 0.5
    textalign 0.5
    color "#000"

style bubble_what:
    align (0.5, 0.5)
    text_align 0.5
    layout "subtitle"
    color "#000"

define bubble.frame = Frame("gui/bubble.png", 55, 55, 55, 95)
define bubble.thoughtframe = Frame("gui/thoughtbubble.png", 55, 55, 55, 55)

define bubble.properties = {
    "bottom_left" : {
        "window_background" : Transform(bubble.frame, xzoom=1, yzoom=1),
        "window_bottom_padding" : 27,
    },

    "bottom_right" : {
        "window_background" : Transform(bubble.frame, xzoom=-1, yzoom=1),
        "window_bottom_padding" : 27,
    },

    "top_left" : {
        "window_background" : Transform(bubble.frame, xzoom=1, yzoom=-1),
        "window_top_padding" : 27,
    },

    "top_right" : {
        "window_background" : Transform(bubble.frame, xzoom=-1, yzoom=-1),
        "window_top_padding" : 27,
    },

    "thought" : {
        "window_background" : bubble.thoughtframe,
    }
}

define bubble.expand_area = {
    "bottom_left" : (0, 0, 0, 22),
    "bottom_right" : (0, 0, 0, 22),
    "top_left" : (0, 22, 0, 0),
    "top_right" : (0, 22, 0, 0),
    "thought" : (0, 0, 0, 0),
}