I just fucked up really badly and need some help. so basically I told Monika that I was taking her somewhere then i placed her file on my desktop. i did the birthday thing and for some reason all the other characters files were there AND monikas so i had two monika files. long story short, I accidentally deleted her and when I open the game it's just an empty chair in the same room. now I deleted everything, got the game again, got the mod, and when i opened it up it's still the same empty chair. how can i bring her back anyone?
edit: yes i tried putting her back in the characters file but nothing happened
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/VisualNovel/MonikaBeforeStory
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Nearly one year in development, Monika Before Story is a fan-made Game Mod of Doki Doki Literature Club! created by Team Monika. It is a time reset of DDLC caused by installing a Mod Engine that allows you to assume the infamous position of the Club President of the Doki Doki Literature Club.
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Needs Wiki Magic Love.
The mod may be downloaded for free from MEGA. or Nexus Mods.
This mod contains examples of the following tropes:
Index
Although you can put everything on your website, please don’t. Here are 15 things that should never go on a website, under any circumstances.
Disclaimer: Some readers will disagree with this advice. These are my sincere recommendations, but ask your strategist or designer before making big changes to your site.
1. Vague Headlines …we’re the best, at what?
Homepage headlines often fail to say what the business does. Instead, they offer a general statement about quality or value.
The visitor’s first question is “am I in the right place?” The headline should answer this question by explicitly stating the main business category.
Ironically, the “what we do” information is usually just below the headline in smaller text.
Here’s an example:
The header “Experience Excellence” is vague. But the text below “award-winning staffing agency” is much more descriptive.
The tune of the song makes a person really soak in His presence. Karthar en meiparai lyrics. The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not want- The most comforting bible verse for all times.
What to do instead:
Tip! The Five Second Test
Show your site to a stranger. Count to five then turn off the screen. Now ask them “what did you recall?” If they don’t know what you do, your headline is too vague. You just failed the Five Second Test. Usability Hub has created a Five Second Test website, and your first test is free. Give it a shot!
Blood dragon armor dragon age origins. Also, use this checklist of 19 Things To Put On Your Home Page. You should have most of those included.
2. Social Media Icons In Your Header …candy-colored exit signs
Social media traffic is great, but only if it’s flowing toward you. When visitors leave your site and go to a social network, that doesn’t help you meet your goals. They are unlikely to return.
Where there’s traffic, there’s hope. A visitor on your site may subscribe or become a lead. A visitor on YouTube is more likely to watch videos of dogs looking guilty. Surprisingly, 26% of top marketing sites put social icons in their headers.
Facebook is worth $300 billion. You need the visitors more than they do.
What to do instead:
Link to social networks cautiously. Here are a few guidelines:
3. Meaningless Section Headers
When parts of a page are broken up into smaller sections, those sections often get their own little headers. These headers are often larger than the items in the section, but far less meaningful. If you have section headers on the pages on your website, ask yourself this question:
If I removed that header, would it confuse visitors?
If the answer is no, then the headers are not meaningful. It’s adding visual noise, not value.
What to do instead:
4. Dates on the Blog
If your content strategy is like mine, you write and share helpful, how-to articles that are useful to your audience …and they don’t go out of style. These articles are “evergreen.” They time travel well. They’ll be just as helpful in a month or a year.
So why add the date?
Adding dates to the blog design or in headlines just makes the content look old later on. If it’s not relevant, why show your age?
Great little post from our friends who make custom buttons over at Busy Beaver! But it’s timeless so why add the year?
What to do instead:
5. YouTube Suggested Videos …#CatFail videos on your site
It’s very easy to embed a YouTube video into your website. But be careful. When the video ends, YouTube may suggest other totally unrelated videos. Are visitors watching cat videos on your site?
What to do instead:
Turn off suggested videos by unchecking a box while grabbing the “embed” code from YouTube. Here’s how:
Cats are bad, but I’ve seen worse. Suggested videos may actually promote a competitor. That’s both embarrassing and counter-productive.
6. Long Paragraphs
Some visitors read. All visitors scan. Short paragraphs are one of the best ways to make your content scannable. Compare these two pages.
The page with the shorter paragraphs is far more likely to keep the visitor.
What to do instead:
7. Stock Photos of People …stranger danger
People pictures are powerful because faces are so compelling. From the time we are infants, we gaze at faces more than any other type of images. Every website should have pictures of people.
But visitors can smell a stock image a mile away. And stock images of people are the worst kind. They just don’t feel genuine.
Perfect lighting. Spotless office. Ethnically diverse. Casual, but serious. Obviously not real.
What to do instead:
8. Press Releases …the lazy, insensitive way to publish
A press release is not a blog post. It’s not educational or entertaining. It’s an announcement, specifically designed for members of the press.
And they aren’t typically written for the web. They’re just copied and pasted into web pages or uploaded as PDFs (more on PDF files in a minute)
So before you put another press release into your blog or news section, ask a few questions:
source: MOZ / Fractl
On the other hand, if the media frequently requests information, your website can help. Create a digital press kit with images, downloads and anything else they are asking for. This makes perfect sense, since it solves a problem.
What to do instead:
Rewrite your press release as a blog post or news article, adapting it for the web. Include the following elements, which probably weren’t part of the original release:
9. PDF Files …the “rust” of the Internet
Many of you may disagree, but hear me out. Here’s rundown of pros and cons for PDF files and HTML webpages.
*It’s true that PDFs often rank, but usually it’s by accident. No serious search optimizer would recommend targeting a competitive phrase with a PDF file.
PDF files are easy to create and upload, so they are an easy fix for content management when sites are hard to update. That’s why I call them rust.
Don’t get me started on Word Docs. They’re even worse! It’s a PDF file that can contain viruses.
Does your site have a PDF problem? Here’s how to check for rust. Search Google for “site:webaddress.com PDF” and you’ll see a count.
Tip! Want to see how many HTML pages a website has? Just do the same search with -PDF, so search for “site:webaddress.com -PDF” and Google will show you the page count.
What to do instead:
10. Ads for Your Own Stuff
We’ve all conditioned ourselves to look away from ads. If it looks like an ad, we ignore it. It’s called “banner blindness.” But many website owners still put banner ads for themselves on their websites.
It’s the worst way to get visitors’ attention.
How To Install Monika After Story Birthday
The trend on media sites is to use “native advertisements” which are paid ads disguised to look like content. They’re very effective because they don’t look like ads.
But a banner ad for yourself on your site is truly native, but you disguised it to look like an ad. That’s the opposite of good marketing.
What to do instead:
11. Your Testimonials Page
Testimonials are “social proof” which is a key aspect of web design and neuromarketing. Smart marketers support every marketing claim with evidence.
But this evidence should be close to the claim, which makes it visible and keeps it in context. If it’s far away (on a separate page) and out of context (not specific to any claim) then it’s weak social proof.
These pages rarely get visited. Just check your Analytics.
What to do instead:
If you need help gathering testimonials, see our complete guide: How to Find, Write and Use Persuasive Testimonials (Plus 10 Testimonial Examples)
12. Email Links …bad for marketing, good for spam
When a visitor gets in touch, you get an email. But was the email sent from a contact form? Or just an email link?
Let’s compare.
The winner here is obvious. Email links fail on every criterion for good marketing, from messaging to routing, from usability to tracking.
Beyond that, email links are spam magnets. Spammers use robots that scrape the web for email addresses. So that email link on your website is filling up your spam folder.
What to do instead:
13. Greedy Forms
The more you ask for, the less you’ll receive. A “greedy form” is a form that asks the visitors for more information that they think they should provide. Example: this form wants you to answer 22 questions to subscribe to a newsletter.
The rule of thumb for conversion optimization: more form fields means a lower conversion rate.
What to do instead:
14. “Submit” as a Call to Action
A call to action is an opportunity to tell the visitor what benefit they’re about to receive. Or, at least, what action they’re taking. A good CTA is specific and benefit driven. A bad call to action says nothing. For example, a button that just says “submit.”
The words in that button matter. Just look at these examples from Michael’s research.
The more descriptive the CTA, the higher the conversion rate. “Submit” says nothing.
What to do instead:
![]() 15. Dead End Thank You Pages
If your thank you page has just two lonely little words at the top and nothing else, it might as well say “good bye.” Right at the peak of their interest, just after they convert …you give them nothing.
But if the thank you page offers the visitor a subsequent action, they’re likely to take it.
There is a small newsletter signup form on the thank you page on this website. People subscribe to the newsletter on that page almost every day, adding hundreds of subscribers per year to our email list.
What to do instead:
Make the Internet a Better Place.
You can help! Just share these tips with friends, family and followers…
[Tweet “Are any of these on your site? 15 things to remove from your site today. #websitefail list”]
What Did I Miss?
I’m sure there are a few more bad ideas we could have included here. What else?
Want to defend any of the features we added here? Was I totally wrong about anything? Ok, I’m ready. Leave your own rants and input in the comments below.
Bad Ending
This is a really easy one to get. You will get this route easily if you do not take advantage of the save/load mechanics. Pretty much just play Sayori’s route. Each poem choose words that she would like. After 3 times, you will come to an option to confess to Sayori, make sure you tell her you love her. After a certain scene with Sayori and the school festival, you will see an “END” screen.
“Certain Scene”
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Once you start your Second playthrough using the “glitched” New Game option, the story will play out drastically different. You will notice all the girls starting to psychotically break.
Here’s what your Title Screen will look like…
You will play through until you enter a room with just Monika. You need to listen to her until she suggest just staring into each other’s eyes. At that point, go into the DDLC file folder Character, and delete “Monika.chr”. There the story will eventually progress to the end. From there, start a new game and play until the credits.
Just Monika
To start playing a new game, you will have to reinstall.
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