Well hello Im trying to learn 2D animation and drawing for creating adult renpy game. I want my game to have animations like anime scenes and some gameplay at least something like wolf among us or walking dead telltale game. My question is does renpy capable of doing stuff like that? Because I heard Python is easier to learn than other languages. Because I don't have any coding experience so that's why I want to work on renpy its also a good way to make a story game. Can you help me to decide? Because I have to start learning to code besides learning animation 2D and drawing.

Download Episode One of The Wolf Among Us, a five-part game series from the creators of the 2012 Game of the Year: The Walking Dead. As Bigby Wolf - THE big bad wolf - you will discover that a brutal, bloody murder is just a taste of things to come in a game series where your every decision can have enormous consequences. Fairytale characters are being murdered in this hard-boiled, violent and mature thriller based on the award-winning Fables comic book series (DC Comics/Vertigo) by Bill Willingham. Additional episodes available as downloadable content.


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From 1995 to 2000, in early winter, elk calves comprised 50% of wolf prey, and bull elk comprised 25%. That ratio reversed from 2001 to 2007, indicating changes in prey vulnerability and availability. Although elk is still the primary prey, bison has become an increasingly important food source for wolves. While there is some predation on bison of all age classes, the majority of the consumption comes from scavenging winter-killed prey or bison dying from injuries sustained during breeding season. The discovery of these changes emphasizes the importance of long-term monitoring to understand predator-prey dynamics. Changes in wolf predation patterns and impacts on prey species like elk are inextricably linked to other factors, such as other predators, management of ungulates outside the park, and weather (e.g. drought, winter severity). Weather patterns influence forage quality and availability, ultimately impacting elk nutritional condition. Consequently, changes in prey selection and kill rates through time result from complex interactions among these factors. Current National Park Service (NPS) research focuses on the relative factors driving wolf predation over the past 25 years.

In the first years following wolf restoration, the population grew rapidly as the newly formed packs spread out to establish territories with sufficient prey. The wolves have expanded their population and range, and now are found throughout the GYE.

Disease periodically kills a number of pups and old adults. Outbreaks of canine distemper occurred in 2005, 2008, and 2009. In 2005, distemper killed twothirds of the pups within the park. Infectious canine hepatitis, canine parvovirus, and bordetella have also have been confirmed among Yellowstone wolves, but their effects on mortality are unknown.

The gray wolf was removed from the endangered species list in 2011 in Idaho and Montana. They were delisted in Wyoming in 2016, and that decision was held up on appeal in April 2017. Wolves are hunted in Idaho, Wyoming, and Montana under state hunting regulations.

Kingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ChordataClass: MammaliaOrder: CarnivoraFamily: Canidae (dog family)Genus: Canis (Latin word meaning "dog")Species: lupus (Greek word meaning "wolf")Common names: gray wolf, timber wolfNames in other languages: Lobo (Spanish), Loup (French), Lupo (Italian), Varg (Swedish), Ulv (Norwegian)Physical CharacteristicsAverage body mass: males 110 pounds (50 kg); females 90 pounds (41 kg)Heaviest known wolf in Yellowstone: 148 pounds (wolf 760M of Yellowstone Delta pack with no food in stomach)Average height at shoulder: males 81 cm, females 77 cmAverage length: 181 cmEyes: blue at birth, light yellow to gold to brown as an adultNumber of bones: 319 males, 318 femalesNumber of teeth: 42Dental formulae: incisors 3 top/3 bottom, canines 1/1, premolars 4/4, molars 3/2 (on each side)Pelage: gray or black (ratio 50:50), rarely whiteBlack coat color: caused by K-locus gene thought to have originated from historic hybridization with domestic dogs 500-14,000 years agoLocomotion: tetrapedal, digitigradeAverage rate of speed: 5 miles/hour (8 kph)Top speed: 35 miles/hour (56 kph)Body temperature: 100-102.5 F (37.3-39.1 C)Respiration: 10-30 breathes per minuteHeart rate: 70-120 beats per minuteBite pressure: 1,200 psiSenses and CommunicationSmell: excellent, although unmeasured. Estimated to be thousands of times better than humansVision: excellent night vision; no red or green cones, but have blue and yellow conesHearing: little is known, but probably similar to dogs (relatively normal hearing abilities compared to other mammals)Howling function: many uses, including intrapack communication, advertising territory, coordinating social activitiesDistance howling can be heard: forest=11km (6.6 mi), open areas=16 km (9.6 mi)DietFeeding habits: generalist carnivore; scavenges when possible and has been known to eat small amounts of vegetationPrimary food sources in Yellowstone: Winter: elk (>96%), bison (3-4% and increasing in recent years; deer (1.5%); Spring: elk (89%), bison (7%), deer (7.1%); Summer: elk (85%), bison (14.1%), deer (5 years old: 18%Current North American population: 67,100-74,100 (53,600-57,600 of these in Canada)Average home range size in Yellowstone (northern range): 274 km2 (range=58-1,151 km2)Average home range size in Yellowstone (interior): 620 km2 (range=105-1675 km2)Average home range size in Yellowstone (park-wide): 428 km2Group of wolves: pack/ family (one of few eusocial species)Average pack size in Yellowstone: 9.8Largest pack recorded in Yellowstone: Druid Peak, 37 wolves (2001); may be the largest ever recorded (42 wolves seen together in Wood Buffalo National Park (1974) but unknown if they were a single pack)Percent of population that are lone wolves in Yellowstone: 2-5%Percent of population that are lone wolves in North America: 10-15%Sex ratio: 50:50Breeding and PupsMating: usually monogamous, but about 25% of packs have multiple breeding pairs under polygymous matingsCourtship: mid-FebruaryGestation: 63 daysBirth period: mid-AprilBirth location: denTypical dens: excavated under large roots, boulders, hillsides, caves with a tunnel leading to an enlarged chamber; several entrances and chambers may be presentDen emergence: 10-14 daysAverage litter size in Yellowstone: 4.4 at den emergence, 3.2 survive until late DecemberMaximum litter size recorded in Yellowstone: 11Split litters: multiple fathers per litter have not been detected in wild gray wolvesWeaning: 5-9 weeks from milk, then brought food (regurgitation) for another 3 monthsMilk content: 6.6% fat; 144 kCal per 100 gramsRendezvous sites: used as wolf pups get older as a central homesite; time spent there and number of homesites varies widely between packsAverage female age at first litter in Yellowstone: 2.7Oonset of female reproduction senescence: 4-5 yearsInterbirth interval: can be every yearEyes open: 12-14 daysDispersal: both sexes, YNP average age 2 years, 1 month; range 1-4 years

The authors sequenced genomes of four Indian and two Tibetan wolves and included 31 additional canid genomes to resolve their evolutionary and phylogenomic history. They found that Tibetan and Indian wolves are distinct from each other and from other wolf populations.

The study recommends that Indian and Tibetan wolf populations be recognized as evolutionarily significant units, an interim designation that would help prioritize their conservation while their taxonomic classification is reevaluated.

Recent genomic studies confirmed that the Tibetan wolf is an ancient and distinct evolutionary lineage. However, until this study, what was known about the evolutionary history of Indian wolves was based on mitochondrial DNA evidence, which is inherited only from the mother. That evidence suggested that the Indian wolf diverged more recently than the Tibetan wolf.

A separate study led by Sacks about endangered red wolves appears on the cover of the same Molecular Ecology issue in September. Addressing a 30-year-long controversy, that study shows that red wolves are not a colonial-era hybrid between gray wolves and coyotes, as some have argued, but the descendant of a pre-historic North American wolf that diverged from coyotes over 20,000 years ago. Both studies have substantial implications for wolf conservation. 17dc91bb1f

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