Table of Contents >> Show >> Hide
- What Are RuneScape Text Effects?
- Before You Start
- How to Write Text Effects on Runescape: 8 Steps
- Step 1: Open the Chat Box and Select the Right Chat Mode
- Step 2: Type a Normal Message First (Without Effects)
- Step 3: Add a Color Prefix
- Step 4: Add a Text Animation Prefix
- Step 5: Combine Color + Effect in the Correct Order
- Step 6: Use the Colon Correctly (and Avoid Spaces in the Wrong Place)
- Step 7: Learn the “Special” Effects (Flash and Glow) for Maximum Nostalgia
- Step 8: Save a Few Go-To Templates and Use Them Sparingly
- Quick RuneScape Text Effects Cheat Sheet
- Common Problems and Fixes
- RuneScape Classic Note (Important if You’re Reading Old Guides)
- Extra: Player Experiences and Practical Examples (About )
- Conclusion
If you’ve ever seen someone in RuneScape yelling a trade offer in wavy neon text and thought, “How are they doing that wizardry?” welcome. This guide explains exactly how to write text effects on RuneScape (including OSRS and RS3 basics) in a simple 8-step format, with examples, common mistakes, and a quick cheat sheet you can actually use in-game.
The short version: you type a prefix before your message (like red: or wave:), and RuneScape applies a color or animation effect to your text. You can even combine many of them for extra drama. Use this power wisely. Or don’t. Varrock has seen worse.
What Are RuneScape Text Effects?
RuneScape text effects are chat formatting commands that change how your public message appears above your character and in chat. Depending on the version of the game, you can apply:
- Colors (like red, green, cyan, white)
- Animated effects (like wave, shake, scroll, slide)
- Flashing or glowing effects (such as flash1 or glow3)
- Combined effects (for example
red:wave:Hello!)
Think of it as early MMO text styling: part communication, part performance art, part “please buy my rune scimmy.”
Before You Start
Know Your Version: OSRS vs RS3
The core format works similarly in both Old School RuneScape (OSRS) and RuneScape 3 (RS3), but some effects and visual behavior vary. OSRS also includes newer color effects like rainbow: and pattern: in addition to classic options.
Make Sure Chat Effects Are Visible
If your fancy text looks plain, the issue might not be your typing. In some settings, chat effects can be toggled or customized. So if flash2: turns into regular yellow text on your screen, check your chat settings before blaming your keyboard (or your cat).
How to Write Text Effects on Runescape: 8 Steps
Step 1: Open the Chat Box and Select the Right Chat Mode
Start by clicking the chat box or pressing Enter so your cursor is active. In most cases, you’ll want to use public chat if you want nearby players to see the effect above your character.
If you’re typing in a clan, private, or filtered channel, the message may still send, but the visual result may not be as obvious (or may appear differently depending on the interface and settings).
Step 2: Type a Normal Message First (Without Effects)
Before adding effects, test your message as plain text. This helps you catch typos and trim overly long lines. Why? Because nothing kills dramatic entrance energy like:
red:waev:Seling lobstrs cheep
Write your message first, then decorate it.
Step 3: Add a Color Prefix
To change the color of your text, type the color name followed by a colon, then your message.
Format: color:Your message
Examples:
red:Selling yew logs!green:Need a partner for questingwhite:Meet at Varrock west bank
Common classic colors include:
yellow:(default-style yellow)red:green:cyan:purple:white:
In OSRS, you may also see newer color commands like rainbow: and pattern:.
Step 4: Add a Text Animation Prefix
Want your text to move instead of just sit there like a polite NPC? Use an animation prefix.
Format: effect:Your message
Examples:
wave:Hello everyone!shake:Boss time!scroll:Buying feathersslide:Watch this
Popular animation effects:
wave:wave2:shake:slide:scroll:
Step 5: Combine Color + Effect in the Correct Order
This is the step that trips people up the most. If you want both a color and an animation, the order matters.
Correct format: color:effect:Your message
Examples:
red:wave:Trade megreen:shake:Run!white:scroll:Clan event starts nowflash1:slide:DANGERglow3:wave:Party at Falador!
If you reverse the order (like wave:red:Hello), the game may not apply both effects correctly. RuneScape is fun, but it is not forgiving about punctuation.
Step 6: Use the Colon Correctly (and Avoid Spaces in the Wrong Place)
RuneScape chat effects rely on exact formatting. Here are the rules that matter:
- Use a colon after each effect keyword
- Don’t replace colons with semicolons or commas
- Don’t misspell effect names (
wave2is notwaves2) - Avoid unnecessary spaces inside the command sequence
Good: purple:wave:Hello there
Bad: purple : wave : Hello there
Some versions tolerate a space after the last colon before your message, but keeping the command string tight is the safest habit.
Step 7: Learn the “Special” Effects (Flash and Glow) for Maximum Nostalgia
In addition to static colors and movement effects, RuneScape includes animated color-changing effects:
flash1:flash2:flash3:glow1:glow2:glow3:
These are great for announcements, jokes, and making your friend ask, “Why are you shouting in rainbow lava text?”
In OSRS, rainbow: and pattern: add even more styling options. The pattern: effect is more advanced because it lets you specify a color pattern code before the final colon.
Step 8: Save a Few Go-To Templates and Use Them Sparingly
Once you get the format down, make a few reusable chat templates for common situations:
green:wave:Grats!red:shake:Incoming!white:scroll:Group ready at bankglow2:wave:Happy birthday!
Pro tip: text effects are best when they help a message stand out. If every line is glowing, sliding, and vibrating, players start mentally muting you. Use them for emphasis, humor, and visibility not every single sentence you type while buying feathers for 40 minutes.
Quick RuneScape Text Effects Cheat Sheet
Basic Color Commands
yellow:red:green:cyan:purple:white:
Animated / Motion Effects
wave:wave2:shake:slide:scroll:
Flashing / Glowing Effects
flash1:,flash2:,flash3:glow1:,glow2:,glow3:
Combination Format
color:effect:message
Example: cyan:wave:Need 1 more for minigame
Common Problems and Fixes
Problem: My Text Effect Doesn’t Work
- Check spelling:
glow3, notglo3 - Check colon placement
- Try public chat instead of another channel
- Confirm chat effects are enabled/visible in settings
Problem: Only the Color Works, Not the Animation
You may have the order wrong. Use color:effect:message, not the reverse.
Problem: It Works for Others but Not for Me
Your display settings may hide or change how overhead chat effects are shown. Check chat customization and interface settings.
RuneScape Classic Note (Important if You’re Reading Old Guides)
Some older guides and forum posts refer to RuneScape Classic, which used a different system. Instead of colon-based commands like red:, Classic often used codes like @red@ for colors. So if you find an ancient guide and copy-paste it into OSRS/RS3, don’t be surprised when nothing happens except confusion.
Extra: Player Experiences and Practical Examples (About )
One of the funniest things about learning RuneScape chat effects is how quickly it turns into a tiny personal branding project. A lot of players start with one simple test message like wave:hello, then five minutes later they’re standing in a bank trying twenty combinations like they’re designing a concert poster. That learning curve is part of the charm. The commands are simple enough to memorize, but expressive enough to feel creative. You’re not just chatting you’re choosing how your message lands.
A common real-world example is group content coordination. Imagine a small team preparing for a boss run or skilling event. In a crowded area, normal yellow text gets buried fast. A player using white:scroll:Meet north entrance or red:shake:Teleport now can make instructions easier to spot without typing the same line five times. It’s not just cosmetic at that point; it improves readability and timing. Even in casual play, a clear effect can help people notice invitations, trade offers, or quick warnings.
Another experience many players share is the nostalgia factor. Players who used RuneScape years ago often remember the first time they saw flash1: or glow3: in a busy marketplace. It felt flashy, mysterious, and slightly chaotic which, honestly, describes classic RuneScape social spaces pretty well. Returning players often re-learn text effects just for fun, and it becomes an instant memory trigger. The moment someone types green:wave:grats!, suddenly everyone is mentally back in a crowded town square in the mid-2000s.
There’s also a social etiquette side to it. Experienced players usually figure out that text effects work best when used intentionally. A single animated line can be funny or useful. Ten glowing scrolling lines in a row can make other people ignore the message entirely. In practice, the “best” chat effect setup is often a light touch: maybe a color for trade messages, a wave effect for celebrations, and a flash/glow effect for rare moments like event countdowns or jokes with friends. It’s the difference between emphasis and visual spam.
For newer players, the most helpful habit is saving a few reliable examples and using them consistently. Once someone learns a small set like red:wave:, green:shake:, and white:scroll:, they stop thinking about syntax and start using effects naturally. That’s when the system becomes genuinely useful rather than just a novelty. And yes, most people still spend at least one session testing ridiculous combinations in a safe area just to see what looks coolest. That is absolutely normal RuneScape behavior, and arguably a rite of passage.
Conclusion
Learning how to write text effects on RuneScape is easy once you know the formula: type the effect keyword, add a colon, then your message. Start with simple colors, move on to animations, then combine them in the correct order for maximum impact. Whether you’re playing OSRS or RS3, a few well-placed chat effects can make your messages more visible, more fun, and a lot more memorable.
Master the basics, keep your formatting clean, and use effects when they actually help. Your future self and everyone standing near the Grand Exchange will thank you.
