Least favorite tile/element/monster? - Printable Version +- CC Zone - Chip's Challenge Forum (https://forum.bitbusters.club) +-- Forum: Chip's Challenge (https://forum.bitbusters.club/forum-4.html) +--- Forum: General Discussion (https://forum.bitbusters.club/forum-13.html) +--- Thread: Least favorite tile/element/monster? (/thread-2461.html) |
Least favorite tile/element/monster? - BitBuster - 11-Jan-2012 You have my eternal thanks (well...maybe not eternal). The other teleport should definitely have been in view; did anyone suggest that at the time? It would have made Pushy one of the great CC levels, imo. And yeah, I overstated the amount of chance required. I guess I just had a run of fairly bad luck. Least favorite tile/element/monster? - geodave - 11-Jan-2012 If you think Pushy is bad -- play Lounge Act. BTW, if you can see the weird "monster partial post", as in Different Barriers, it's not so bad. Least favorite tile/element/monster? - BitBuster - 11-Jan-2012 Which set is Lounge Act in? Least favorite tile/element/monster? - geodave - 11-Jan-2012 TS0 Least favorite tile/element/monster? - quiznos00 - 11-Jan-2012 Quote:Which set is Lounge Act in? TS0 But, even though it does have partial posts, it doesn't have any with moving monsters that cannot be seen. Least favorite tile/element/monster? - James - 11-Jan-2012 Quote:The block/water delay in Lynx is quite annoying when you have a short attention span, like me. I shudder at the thought of Pain or Writer's Block in Lynx... There are also two gliders in the lower section in Lynx! (quite the startling discovery upon opening the map for the first time in an editor...they die in fire in MS so quickly you never get to see them) Least favorite tile/element/monster? - Hornlitz - 11-Jan-2012 Quote:If you think Pushy is bad -- play Lounge Act. LOUNGE ACT IS A GOOD LEVEL. and you can see the only timing partial post. My only concern is what happened at the end of the level in my LP. Least favorite tile/element/monster? - jblewis - 11-Jan-2012 For an interesting use of invisible walls, check out Ida Roberthson's "What Direction, What Direction." |