Oh, wow, that's a neat tool. While the topic is MtG, does this mean I could input a bunch of names from Final Fantasy X (and X-2) and it would give me names that seem like they belong to Spirans?? O.o
Yep. and while 100-500 control words is good, I've gotten some excellent results from 15-30
Ò_Ó
YOU MUST TELL ME HOW TO DO THAT.
I have tried plugging in my text file of names multiple times and it keeps telling me that I don't have enough words.
You type in the individual words, separated by commas with no spaces, then hit enter to accept the list of words. "apple,bear,cat" would be enough for the program, but more is better to get a consistent result. I also don't know how it treats special characters. It might have a conniption at a hyphen.
For instance, I used LangCreate to generate a language file for Altrium (on Adrisar), using the character names I had devised for the PWG as control words. So the control words were...
Aluma,Tarina,Nadia,Sela,Terinus,Tor,Ronar,Solmn,Reyal,Garan,Halidar,Korvus,Madar,Chara,Vyn,Larasha,Nueh,Orin,Prestor,Logan,Avinar,Sodar,Lenmis,Laran,Lars
And the result was the following txt lang file
Attachment:
language_ALTRIUM.txt [54.18 KiB]
Downloaded 248 times
Which I used to do naming for
West Wind (mostly cities -- While you can ignore the "meanings" of the output list and I often do, "Liron Kadus" (The city that travels ever westward) means "City West" and "Liron Sosta" (Altrium's capital) means "City Royal")
Everyone and everything in "In the Palace of the Emperor" was from the Great Crater lang file, created with control words native to the indian subcontinent...
ravan,indra,bhgabad,gita,veda,dharma,upanishad,pandava,arjuna,yoga,visada,sankhya,karma,jnana,sanyasa,dhyan,atmasanyam,vijana,aksara,brahma,raja,guhya,vibhuti,visvarupa,darsana,bhakti,ksetra,vibhaga,gunatraya,purusottama,daivasura,sampad,sraddhatraya,moksha
Generating
Attachment:
language_CRATER.txt [57.02 KiB]
Downloaded 338 times
EDIT: Not that this should be a problem, but I recall now that at least one word must begin with a consonant, at least one word must end with a consonant, at least one word must begin with a vowel, and at least one word must end with a vowel. This could be satisfied in two words. So if by some strange occurrence you are missing an initial or terminal type of letter, it might also give you an error for that.