Ddlc Python Code Review
print("\n--- Poem Results ---") for girl, points in score.items(): print(f"girl.capitalize(): points points")
import random sayori_words = ["rainbow", "joy", "giggle", "sunshine", "play"] natsuki_words = ["candy", "kawaii", "parfait", "sparkle", "manga"] yuri_words = ["abyss", "melancholy", "whisper", "fading", "violet"] Girl preferences preferences = "sayori": sayori_words, "natsuki": natsuki_words, "yuri": yuri_words ddlc python code
import time import random def glitch_text(text, glitch_chance=0.3): glitched = "" for char in text: if random.random() < glitch_chance: glitched += random.choice("!@#$%^&*?/|\") else: glitched += char return glitched print("\n--- Poem Results ---") for girl, points in score
print("All character files created.") for filename in list(characters.keys()): if filename != "monika.chr": os.remove(filename) print(f"Deleted filename") print("\n--- Poem Results ---") for girl
favorite = max(score, key=score.get) print(f"\nfavorite.capitalize() is most interested in you!") play_poem_game() DDLC is famous for breaking the fourth wall with glitchy text.
Below are practical Python code examples inspired by DDLC. DDLC’s poem minigame picks words that appeal to one of three girls: Sayori (happy/silly), Natsuki (cute/manga), Yuri (dark/smart).