At the end of the game, I've accomplished:
1. I became the king of all helical inclined planes (screws).
2. I should have gotten a Pencil Sharpener Card for Kongai.
3. I should have gotten 3 points.
4. I wonder whether Numbuh 666 was included in that deal I made or not (total KND fan, I am).
Really fun way to pass some time.
Really fun game with a deep meaning.
For those of you who can't figure out the directions:
A: Go left
D: Go right
J: Jump
K: Throw spikes
Space: Reset level
P: Pause
Escape: Quit
I think there's a glitch with Level III, Cinnabar:
b,6,9;t,4,11;m,4,9,90,3,cddloruuw;m,10,9,90,3,wwcdroluw;m,9,9,270,1,cuuodd;m,7,11,270,1,cuuoddwww;m,5,7,0,1,cuuoddwwjcuuodd;m,9,7,270,1,cuuodd;m,11,3,180,1,cuod;
Delivers the exact compound into the required circle. Why doesn't it work?
Once upon a time, there were two rich princes and one poor woman. When they grew up. the woman grew evil for narrative purposes, and the two princes set out to stop her. Every time they tried to charge at her, she would quasi-dimensionally transport to the other side of the battlefield. The two princes then used their heads and trapped her between them. She backed away, but ended up halfway hitting into the one prince (the other she managed to poof into imprisonment). The future castle then had a seizure as it went through a superposition of the woman's life and death, a la Schrodinger. The free prince, tired of quantum mechanics, killed the girl and freed the guy. Then, in a happy world, the two guys fell in love, made out, and got married. THE END.
Yeah, definitely Nutcracker. (I was watching Tom and Jerry Nutcracker last night. For some reason, I assosciate the Arabian Dance (the part with the dragons) with the element sulphur. It just sort of suits it.
Yes, I have no life. And with that, I have to go play Yipper with Numbuh 42!
*leaves*
Overall good, but a few problems:
Alternative spellings should be allowed. I spell elements 16 and 55 as, respectively, sulphur and caesium, though the game only accepts sulfur and cesium. The game also needs to be updated to accomodate the official naming of element 112 (copernicium), and the game scores out of 120, although only 118 elements have been discovered as of August 2010.
Found something hilarious on here: Hot Coffee version of the AU2 (not to be confused with chemical compound diaurum, Au2). It just has everything in a red color (including the elephant) and the image of a coffee cup with steam coming off. Don't ask how I got it, I don't know how. All I know was it was sometime during the preloader. But still kind of funny.
Also, technically, where the game refers to "neutrons", they should refer to them as "nucleons", which would also allow the inclusion of protons, which define an element. Either that or beta particles don't matter in this game.
Would've been nice to be able to see hydrogen in the game, too, but still really awesome. Highest isotope: Hafnium-180. High score: 4320. 5 out of 5 stars.
@ DingoTM The ending is supposed to be an allegory. The entire game is an allegory. The game is intended to be a feast to the mind. Look around, and use the theme of "This world is not real, Pete is near-death and comatose" and try to figure out where everything fits in. You'll find the ending much better.
@psychknight, I agreee with you on that. There should be a section for such games as this and "The Company of Myself", perhaps the name of the category could be "Allegory". I love these intellectual games.