Extracting Dialogue Files

[www.scampers.org]

[github.com]

Open Riveal 11.1



Select "Battleborn > PoplarGame > CookedPCConsole > English(US) [French(France), German, Italian or Spain(Spanish) other voiced languages] > Audio_Base.pck" to extract from



Choose your output location to extract the files to.



Let it do the hard work and extract all of the OGG files



Additionally, just to make sure you're getting everything the tool can find:



Additionally, just to make sure you're getting everything the tool can find: Select "Steam > steamapps > common > Battleborn > PoplarGame > CookedPCConsole > English(US) [French(France), German, Italian or Spain(Spanish) other voiced languages] > Audio_Base_Startup.pck" to extract from



Choose your output location to extract the files to.



Let it do the hard work and extract all of the OGG files



And this should get you everything the tool can acquire from these archives (more than 21,000 files). Note that are potentially duplicates between these two archives, but you can simply merge the "english" folder, then overwrite any identical files. The "sfx" folder only contains a very small number of files ("Poplar_VO_UI_Lore_MontanaSong.ogg" the one you'll most likely be looking for).

I was previously in the process of trying to see what tools can extract such things as the music files (I was told " Ravioli Game Tools " is the most ideal way by VladlenCry, a fellow who managed retrieved the Open Beta's music), but due to how similarly the audio files are packaged & arranged to thegames (It's still an Unreal Engine game as per most of Gearbox's developed games utilising the Wwise middleware in an almost identical fashion to& onward), it ended up being an almost identical process.The tool I used was "Riveal 11.1", a tool by Ron Hayter designed for extraction of video, pictures & audio from such games asand incidentally ideal for extracting dialogue from. It can be downloaded from his official website: http://www.rshayter.com/riveal/ Here is the tool as you'll see it (When running on a Mac OS of course)The process is very simple, but I'll give you a quick rundown (This guide assumes you know the location of your game files within your Steam Library, that being "[Storage Drive] > Steam > steamapps > common"):Here's an example of what I was able to extract with the tool (No Story Spoilers):Note that OGG files are not typically playable by Windows Media Player or perhaps Quicktime, but such players as VLC Media Player & editors such as Audacity can playback these files no problem.