Guest Anonymous May 14, 2012 Share May 14, 2012 So I've been thinking, what about sound? It's the one thing not covered in the guides, but is highly similar to visualization. I'm making a pony tulpa, so I might watch some horses to get a sense of hooves and such, but I think that sound is something that should be worked on. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest May 14, 2012 Share May 14, 2012 My guess is that once the tulpa is sentient and fully visual, you could start to parrot environmental sounds for it. At least, that's my plan. Correct me if that's a bad idea. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThatOneGuy May 14, 2012 Share May 14, 2012 Sound just sort of automatically came with form for me. The voice also developed on its own. Orange juice helps with concentration headaches. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest May 14, 2012 Share May 14, 2012 Are you sure you even want to hear the hooves? That's going to get real old real fast. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Citizen Anon May 15, 2012 Share May 15, 2012 If it wasn't already obvious, I'm shooting for a tulpa pone as well, and I haven't thought much about the hoof noises. And now that the Guest above mentions that potential problem, I might not want to. When it comes to sound, her voice has been my primary focus. I'd imagine it's OK to parrot when working on the voice, otherwise you wouldn't be able to work on the voice. Correct me if wrong though. Name: Lyra Form: http://i.imgur.com/JjMxK.jpg Sentience: Emotional responses, occasional brief vocalization Currently doing: Personality & narration Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tulpatalk May 15, 2012 Share May 15, 2012 If it wasn't already obvious, I'm shooting for a tulpa pone as well, and I haven't thought much about the hoof noises. And now that the Guest above mentions that potential problem, I might not want to. When it comes to sound, her voice has been my primary focus. I'd imagine it's OK to parrot when working on the voice, otherwise you wouldn't be able to work on the voice. Correct me if wrong though. Eh, it seems like people usually just let the voice develop in its own. [Note: Opinions] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lulu May 15, 2012 Share May 15, 2012 When it comes to voice, I'm going with what ThatOneGuy said. Actually when it comes to anything my tulpa can change/decide by its self (except gender) I'm leaving it up to her. When it comes to environmental sounds, Well, I would imagine she wouldn't be doing much walking because I'm giving her the ability to fly/float. To me a tulpa flying feels natural because they aren't effected by gravity. (God dammit why did you guys have to make a forum! Watch, my post count will be around 2000 in 3 days) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Anonymous October 21, 2012 Share October 21, 2012 Anyone have any new thoughts on this topic? Has sound in your wonderland happened before a vocal response? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Anonymous October 22, 2012 Share October 22, 2012 I started with focusing on the sound of footfalls while walking around in addition to imposing visuals. Now environmental noises happen more automatically, though sometimes they don't. Explanation: high stealth modifiers. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mister_Moniker October 24, 2012 Share October 24, 2012 I haven't thought about it, really. I was originally planning on attempting to parrot a voice onto Dream, but I think I'd rather hear what she thinks she should sound like. We haven't had any noises in my headspace yet, either; we spend most of our time flying around space and being generally corny. Moniker, Dream and the ensuing hilarity Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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