Scrolling Text

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Most spoken dialogue on screen scrolls by at a fairly rapid pace. If it scrolls too slowly, it can make bypassing long conversations very annoying. If it scrolls too quick, you may miss important information. Most games nowadays let you control the scroll rate by tapping the action button to clear the screen, and/or setting scroll speed in the options window.

Not to be confused with Opening Scroll, which is kind of the same thing, only for movies and tv.

Examples of Scrolling Text include:
  • Breath of Fire III suffered considerably from slow scrolling.
  • Wendy Oldbag from Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney would often go on long, rambling, bitter rants about her life, or just nothing in particular. These would scroll automatically at a very quick rate, giving the player the same confused, bewildered state of mind trying to read it as the other characters would have listening to it.
    • In Justice For All, Richard Wellington from case 1 and Moe the Clown from case 3 would also ramble randomly at times, with very fast Scrolling Text. And for added fun, Wendy Oldbag shows up as a witness again in case 4 of Justice For All.
    • In addition, the speed of the text is used to indicate how fast someone is talking. This is most noticeable when a character is nervous - their text speeds up.
      • And when Phoenix or Apollo present a theory they're not entirely sure about, their text slows to a crawl.
  • Xenogears, already a dialogue-heavy game, was made far worse by slow scrolling. Game Shark codes just to accelerate the text became popular.
  • One recruitable character in Suikoden V required the player to listen through his ridiculously long, slow-scrolling (literally one letter at a time) spiel without once pressing the button to skip through it in order to recruit him.
  • The gardener in Super Mario RPG is another Motor Mouth video game character who tends to speak in rapidly scrolling text, which causes Mario to Face Fault.
  • Final Fantasy Tactics is infamous for certain cutscenes with unbelievably slow scroll rates, one of which is an obvious programming error. Repeat after me: l.i.t.t.l.e. .m.o.n.e.y.
    • Apparently, this was somehow a programming problem. In FFT: War of the Lions for the PSP, the text is sped up dramatically, so that the previous interminable scenes are completed in a fraction of the time.
  • The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time had particularly slow text scroll, coming up one letter at a time. There was no real way to speed it up, sometimes you could get a section of it to be skipped over entirely (and completely miss what's said), but usually only if you had already spoken to the person in question, and sometimes there was no way at all.
  • This is the entire point of Mr. Resetti from Animal Crossing. Basically, it's possible to prevent the game from remembering certain events by simply resetting it without saving. However, the game still remembers that it was reset in the first place, and as punishment the next time you start the game Mr. Resetti (a mole) will pop out of the ground and rant angrily about how you cheated. Particularly annoying if you should turn off the game and simply forget to save. Even more annoying when he shows up as an Assist Trophy in Smash Bros. Brawl, where he does the exact same thing, obscuring a good chunk of the screen with his pointless rambling.
    • In Smash Bros. Brawl, the rant literally takes five minutes.
  • EarthBound, man... there are two points in the game where either a Mr. Saturn or a Tenda tribesman will ask you to have coffee with them. If you say yes, the game treats you to a slow scrolling paean to how far the party has come so far and what remains unfinished. All on the traditional LSD-trip Earthbound backdrop.
  • In Dragon Quest VIII, most of the text can be sped up by pressing Triangle to skip the scrolling. However, if you're talking to an innkeeper (to rest, obviously) or a priest (to save your game), you can't skip a single letter of it, except when loading your game. This makes it take nearly twice as long as it should to rest at an inn or save your progress. You also can't skip King Trode's text when doing anything with the Alchemy Pot.
  • In Cave Story, the text scrolls slightly faster if you lose a life and have to go through an Unskippable Cutscene a second (or third, or twentieth) time.
  • Tales of Monkey Island: This is the first time we actually see scrolling subtitle text that accompanies the voices in a Monkey Island game, be it fast or slow. Sometimes words in the subtitle text start appearing before a character says them almost at the exact same time the subtitle finishes, which is apparent in some scenes in Chapter 4.