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aaany day now
I've definitely made use of splicing and stuff, but it's not easy to do it and make the audio sound completely natural, especially when it's something that will be repeated hundreds of times throughout gameplay. A lot of his dialogue doesn't work with specific stuff.
Now Klonoa has lines for calling out special infected when he spots them.
An Ed Edd n Eddy voicepack sounds awesome!
I'll give you some more quick advice, I do most of my work on audacity. You need to make sure your audio matches the length and frequency of the audio you're replacing or it will sound very distorted and jumbled. Most voicelines are at 22050Hz, but I am pretty sure some of them could be at a different frequency so keep an eye out for that.
The hardest part I can imagine is getting all the audio clips in the first place, unless you already have that in the first place. I imagine you'd have to grab every episode of Ed Edd n Eddy and manually cut out every voiceline of the character. Otherwise scouring the internet might also yield some results!
First you need to install Left 4 Dead Authoring Tools, which should be in your Steam Library, just enable tools in the drop down menu over your Steam Games.
Have your mod file ready (Do this before you convert it into a vpk file, the mod should be in folders matching the filepath of whatever you're replacing) and put it inside a folder, name the folder what you want the mod to be called.
If you have it done right, it should look something like this for example:
Mod Folder > sound > player > survivor > voice > [Survivor File you're Modding]
Once everything is set up, go to your Left 4 Dead 2 folder, go to bin, and look for vpk.exe.
Drag your mod folder onto vpk.exe and it will create a vpk file in whatever folder your mod file is contained in.
Hope that helps!
For example
Left 4 Dead 4 Folder > lfd2 > data > audio > voicelines > Ellis