Posts: 1,049
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Scorecard: Miika Toukola
03-Feb-2018, 1:23 AM
(This post was last modified: 05-Feb-2018, 7:35 AM by M11k4.)
Ah, the joys of February. Some people look forward to skiing. Some perhaps wait for Valentine's Day. But what do Chipsters do? We wait for a Walls of Competition!
Your task is to pick a level from CCLP4 and use its arrangement of walls to create a new level. You can pick any level from the range #1-#149, then delete anything you want except for any walls, and finally rebuild it into a new level. If you wish, you can also pick another prominent tile in the level and replace it with some other tile exactly.
You might know the drill by now, on this our fifth year visiting this theme, but this time I thought we could be a bit more lenient on the rules. If you have already made a level that fits the criteria you may submit it here. I see three reasons to allow them this time around:
1) CCLP4 just came out under a year ago. (Not sure how that helps, but it is a factor that has not been true previously.)
2) I haven't yet seen any of these levels even if they have been released. (Assuming I will judge the competition this factors in.)
3) I was asked if this could be done this time. (I love to accommodate you all.)
Other than that, my main instruction is to keep your submissions fun. You may also write a short explanation on if and how a particular wall arrangement inspired your new level with those walls. (I don't think it will be extra credit directly, but it will give me more insight and perhaps appreciation for what you make, and I may take that into consideration in the rankings.)
The deadline is March 4th where you live. Please send your submissions to valeosote at hotmail dot com.
Ask away with any other questions!
-Miika
Technical notes:
[Click to Show Content]
-Do not make a overly difficult level. A moderate difficulty is fine but then it would be nice if it wasn't too long.
-The level must be solvable, but does not need to work in both MS and Lynx. You may even use invalid tiles if you wish. Ask about submitting something in CC2; it shouldn't be a problem but it will make it harder on me to rank the entries.
-The level should preferably be new, but this time around you may something you have already made before.
-Please give the level a new name, time limit and set a new password. Don't forget!
-You may submit more than one entry, but please keep the levels distinct from each other. Your best two entries is recommended. You may also pair up and collaborate with someone else for your submission, but please only one level per such pairing.
-Points may be deducted for late entries, but will be accepted until I judge the levels. This is usually a couple of days after the stated deadline, but don't count on it; it exists more for the chance to update the levels if there is something really wrong with them.
-Entrants qualify for the normal prizes: the "You're Winner!"-award, Chip Cup points, and "Tool Box"-award for first time entrants.
-Please ask about other unclear situations. You may also check the previous competitions if similar situations were already discussed. There's interesting stuff hiding in the archives!
-Email and attach your submissions to my email stated above. I will strive to reply with a confirmation that I have received your entry. I prefer if you use your username and this competition in the subject. Keep it short and simple, something like: "February Create - Mario"
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Posts: 1,049
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06-Mar-2018, 3:45 AM
(This post was last modified: 07-Mar-2018, 6:44 AM by M11k4.)
Thanks Ryan for that download!
Now onto the results... If you want to play the levels first, you can find them here:
CC Zone attachment: /files/file/654-cc-zone-february-2018-create-levels-packaged/?do=download&r=10797">CC Zone February 2018 Create Levels Packaged
We had eight entrants this month with a total of 15 different levels. I've picked my favorite level from each designer and ranked those against each other. I'll try to keep my comments shorter than usual by answering these three questions about each level:
- What was the best thing about the level?
- What would I consider building differently if it was my level?
- What was the most memorable thing about the level?
If that doesn't cover what I had in mind, I might add some other short comment too. I'm not sure if I'll comment on all the levels or only the ranked ones. Let's get started!
" Another Perspective" by Ihavenoname248
This level is disqualified. Let's hope your other entries are any good.
I would award myself last place had I had the time to build the idea I had into a level, but I didn't. Not sure why I'm sharing that info, but I bet there are others out there too that think about these things without following through. An extra thanks to everyone who did find a way to join this competition!
" Candy Boy" by RB3ProKeys (walls of Non-Dimensional Layer, #5
) (8th place, 4pts)
- You managed to fit a lot in to a very rigid structure.
- I would add more free space to let the player understand what's going on.
- How I spent a long time wondering which choices to make without knowing if I'm actually doing the right thing.
I like complex and challenging levels, but this level taught me that this sort of complexity, what I'd call comprehension complexity, is not that fun. If you know the solution, sure, it is not that bad, but going into the level blind took a lot of effort. I'm not happy ranking this last, particularly knowing that this sort of a work of art can't be thrown together without a lot of work, but something has to be here and game play trumps a cool design.
" Complex Complex" by rubenspaans (walls of Difficulty Switch, #25
)(7th place, 5pts)
- I enjoyed playing this. The best part was a variety of straightforward tasks that were interesting.
- I'd add another red key and utilize the fireball somehow. Maybe also add something more to the bottom room.
- I'll remember the puzzle with the right time to step on the thief. That was fun.
I also enjoyed your other level, " Corroding Corridors "(walls of Puuf, #71
, (0,8) not a wall). It did a lot in a very confined space, so as a design I thought it was even better than Complex Complex. However, the game play was not quite as engaging, so I didn't pick it as your representative level for the rankings. The second socket was a nice touch.
" Boot Burglar" by Markus (walls of Inferno Dynamics, #18
, (10,13) not a wall)(6th place, 6pts)
- The blob area and the fireball race were great.
- Make some of the puzzles a bit tougher, like using the Glider more, or adding something that ties the level together tighter.
- I'll remember the puzzles in the four rooms. They all had a good concept and used different elements and monsters.
When I first played this I was sure I'd rank it pretty high, but when I started making those difficult choices, this is where it ended up. Interestingly, this isn't the only level to use these walls, an overlap that doesn't happen often.
" In the Hive" by chipster1059 (walls of In the Pool, #7
)(5th place, 7pts)
- A great balance between action around you and a limited moving environment.
- Not much here that I'd change. I tried busting the level with the block disrupting the bugs, but it was hard. That might be a cool alternate solution to consider allowing. Otherwise I think you did a fantastic job seeing this concept through.
- The re-purposing of the center room as a nice puzzle worked very well. I'll also remember boosting into the paramecium by the fire boots right at the end a couple of times.
On another day I might have ranked this elsewhere, maybe a bit lower or higher. That's how it goes when you make a completely fine level that isn't unfun but only lacks something extremely exeptional. Your other level, " Highway Tunneling" (walls of Clay Tunnel, #98
), was a bit more mundane though not bad.
" Abandoned Thrift Store" by Flareon350 (walls of Lockdown, #97
)(4th place, 8pts)
- This level has a nice flow to it from one section to the other and uses the available space very naturally.
- There's really no major issues to address, but I'd try to simplify some parts. The thin walls don't do much. The thief at (16,13) makes sure you don't bring a block from the cloner, but what if there was no cloner and that area just had three or four blocks to begin with? A couple of the toggle walls could also be just floor if you wanted. There's one Walker that starts on floor and the others don't, which annoys me
- I'll remember the Walkers. The space they had was of the right size. Also the ending puzzle was a clever way to close off the level, not necessarily that the puzzle was mind blowing, but its use of both thieves and a Walker tied back to the rest of the level.
I liked your second level as well, " Gridblock" (walls of Gridlock, #106
, as if you didn't guess), but it just had less going for it. I did enjoy the minimalism in tile choices and appreciated how you had come up with non-trivial block arrangements within an existing wall configuration. It's my favorite of the non-ranked levels this month.
" Instigate and Exfiltrate" by ajmiam (walls of Wretched Hive of Scum and Villainy, #90
)(3rd place, 10pts)
- The best part of this level was the "instigating and exfiltrating" in the main area of the level.
- I would look into changing the force floor room to have a new puzzle with the same theme as the rest of the level, because that was the stronger concept and you could probably find a twist on it. I do like the existing puzzle in the lower half of the level, in fact it's very clever and rewarding, but there really was no connection to the first half, so maybe it could be split into a separate level.
- I'll remember cooking the block pushing above the teleport. There's other things to remember that are more positive, but my own mistakes just illicit a stronger reaction.
Your second level, " Insanitorium" (walls of Ditchdigger, #94
), used unknown information in a very cohesive way. I liked the exploration and finding out how to get into the rooms that are more easily missed. It would still be better with fewer rooms, like maybe 10-12 rooms instead of 16 (the row I'd remove is the second from the bottom). I'll remember the Walkers and Teeth that were safe but scary.
" Flaming Loop" by Bacorn (walls of Split Path, #54
)(2nd place, 12pts)
- I love a puzzle with a clear goal and interesting multi-part solution. The level is the right size it uses the whole area well.
- I'd add more toggle doors to guard the chip. As it is, it looks like it might be enough to direct the Fireball onto the toggle button for a pair of presses instead of trapping it in a loop. Then again, there's not really the right amount of room to add another toggle door, and even if there was, the Fireball usually IS caught in a loop once you get it to hit the button. Playing it again right now, I found something to change: the bomb into a pop-up to make fetching that chip quicker.
- Asking you for your solution and seeing it was the same as mine. The level feels like there might be alternate solutions, but in reality there seems to be only one that's the most straight-forward.
" Another Perspective" by Ihavenoname248 (walls of Monster Swapper, #80
)(1st place, 15pts, congrats!)
Ok, so it turns out I couldn't disqualify this level for being too good.
- The best part of the level was of course the concept and the meticulous way you stuck with it. Had you given in on even a tile, everything up to that point would have been worthless. You found interesting ways to utilize the duality, like the toggles, and of course how rooms played differently. It's hard to pick a favorite area in the level, but perhaps it's the Teeth corner. That area is not perfect, as the trap mechanism only works once and if you miss the second block on your first try it takes a lot to recover from it, but overall the pay-off is worth it.
- I would still try to see if there was a way to improve the second top left area with the Gliders. I know you are restricted by the wall configuration to do something great here, but even in the first half of the level, the second Glider was a bit redundant. (Was it too tough to have a chip at the end of the corridor? Maybe that's too tricky because you would only be able to get the first one and the second one would cook the level.) I also wonder if there was a way to force the toggles from toggling in MS as is required in Lynx. Having two tank buttons being pressed every move would work, but would also be noisy; any other mechanism for this might require larger changes. The Fireballs do practically same task on both halves, so some interaction with the changing elements would not be out of place, though it is hard to do that while sticking to the same wall configuration.
- I'll remember getting stuck right at the end with the block next to a tank. It felt like a situation where I could still get out of it, but there was no way to fix the situation. Many of the puzzles were fun, and I'll remember and replay those gladly.
You sent in five levels hoping at least one would stick and that payed off.
" Prison Lane" (walls of 'Fire Factory' #18
) had stuff in it that was nicely put together. The toggles throughout the level give it a cohesive feel and yet they are part of all the puzzles in a variety of ways.
" Illicit Logging Facility" (green locks and sockets of Nectar Meadow, #85
) was very well made too. You were able to take that checkerboard pattern with sockets and green locks and split the level in two nicely.
" Sidewinder" (walls of Anaconda, #66
) used the walls of an awkward level decently well, but nothing stood out really. Perhaps the paramecium part was my favorite here.
" Neon Nights" (walls of Chip Controls, #118
) looks nice in an editor but this doesn't translate to game play. Maybe the level would work with a very tight time limit and less block pushing (in the second room at least).
There you have it! It turns out answering those three questions did nothing to shorten the text or the time I spent compiling this post.
I did enjoy the process, and am happy for all of you who were part of this! Thanks again!
If you have more levels that use the walls from a CCLP4 level, do share them in below for those that want to check them out or otherwise keep a list. I didn't comment much on how a level was different or similar to the original with those walls, but it was on my mind while I was playing the levels.
We might not have a new create competition before April. If you have any requests for create competition themes, do share! As always, I'd gladly hear what you think of the levels. (And James, that's how you post the results!)
-Miika
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Quote:On 3/6/2018 at 3:45 AM, M11k4 said:
"Instigate and Exfiltrate" by ajmiam (walls of Wretched Hive of Scum and Villainy, #90
)(3rd place, 10pts)
(19, 20) and (19, 21) are walls in the original level, but not here. Tanks on top of a wall are still a wall!
As always, some very nice levels submitted. And hey, I even managed to win
Quote:On 3/6/2018 at 3:45 AM, M11k4 said:
The best part of the level was of course the concept and the meticulous way you stuck with it.
It was quite the challenge to work on- I had a headache from trying to keep in mind both sides of the level while constructing (forgetting to eat due to not wanting to break the creative flow didn't help) and ultimately, I started building the level just to see if I could make a level that played out totally differently with the same layout, as a personal challenge. I'm very happy to see it getting some appreciation- and hopefully it makes it into an official set someday, even with the NW blockslide resetting being a bit of a hassle.
My CC1 levelsets: (25, 150, 149, 149, 149, 149, 60, 149, 43, +2 = 1025 total)
25 levels.dat | Ultimate Chip.dat | Ultimate Chip 2.ccl | Ultimate Chip 3.dac | Ultimate Chip 4.zip | Ultimate Chip 5 | Ultimate Chip 6 | Walls of CCLP4 | i^e
IHNN-Ultimate: 147 of my best levels (through UC5), plus 2 entirely new ones. May be overhauled soon.
My CC2 levelsets: (100, ???)
IHNN1 | IHNN2
My CC score tracker. Has lots of cool automated features!
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Quote:3 hours ago, Ihavenoname248 said:
(19, 20) and (19, 21) are walls in the original level, but not here. Tanks on top of a wall are still a wall!
Oh, no! That's what I get for blindly following the Walls of CCLP4 template set without verifying it for myself first...guess I'll have to edit the block checkerboard before I put it in one of my sets.
Miika, it seems you liked the monster disruption more than the lower half, which surprised me because I thought the monster disruption was the weakest part...also, the reason some of the puzzles seemed disconnected is because I was intentionally going for a themeless variety level (since I rarely make those). Ah, well...3rd is pretty good and actually a bit better than I expected.
Congrats to Jeffrey and everyone else who participated! Definitely going to take some time to check out the other entries....
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07-Mar-2018, 1:21 PM
(This post was last modified: 07-Mar-2018, 1:23 PM by Flareon350.)
I'm a little disappointed that Gridblock wasn't the ranked level of mine. I worked really hard on that puzzle (which there's not a whole lot of puzzles like that to begin with). It really bothers me to know a good puzzle level doesn't even get a rank.
But it's cool. Abandoned Thrift Store does have more going for it. I just felt that was my weaker entry. The block cloner in that level is a block cloner because placing three or four blocks would have made it unnecessarily cramped.
I'll be checking out these other levels later!
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Quote:7 hours ago, Ihavenoname248 said:
(19, 20) and (19, 21) are walls in the original level, but not here. Tanks on top of a wall are still a wall!
I remember it being mentioned in a previous walls-of competition that buried walls don't need to be kept, which is why i removed them in the "pure" version.
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Quote:4 hours ago, random 8 said:
I remember it being mentioned in a previous walls-of competition that buried walls don't need to be kept, which is why i removed them in the "pure" version.
Maybe that was referring to CCLP2 where buried walls act like recessed walls that aren't visible as recessed walls until you step on them?
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Not exactly. I found the mention in the CCLP2 competition thread:
Quote:On 2/8/2015 at 2:17 PM, Hornlitz said:
Do walls on the second layer have to stay on the second layer, or should they be brought to the first layer/deleted?
Quote:On 2/8/2015 at 6:35 PM, Ihavenoname248 said:
I asked Miika that and he said to do what you chose with them-personally, I deleted invalid walls and left valid buried walls.
I didn't see anything in the walls-of threads saying this no longer applies or anything.
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Yeah, I didn't even bother asking ajmiam if he intended to remove those walls as it was within his right to do so. Of course if you rather didn't remove them, we can adjust this in the update for the yearly collected set
I always find it a bit amusing that we get stuck on the details (oh, no this level is busted! -talk) more than the big picture or other feedback
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