Crayon Physics Combines Science and Puzzles 78
IamAHack writes "NPR covered a new game that seems like it would have great appeal to Slashdot readers: Crayon Physics. Quoting: 'A new computer game went on sale this week. It's not a blockbuster like Halo or World of Warcraft. There's no first-person shooting, no sports, no guitar, no microphone. Instead, there's a crayon. The game is Crayon Physics Deluxe. It's a simple, mesmerizing game created by a 25-year-old independent games designer from Finland named Petri Purho. "It's a game where your crayon drawings come to life,' Purho tells NPR's Melissa Block. 'You draw stuff and your drawings behave physically correctly. As soon as you release the last button, the laws of physics are applied to your drawing."' A demo is available, and Opposable Thumbs has a review of the game."
FTA reveals all (Score:5, Funny)
How is this news? According to wikipedia, the game has been released on June 1st, 2007.
"Ever since the initial game was developed in the summer of 2007, it has managed to garner much press and acclaim, especially since developer Petri Purho revealed that he was working on a deluxe version of the game that would include improved physics and more levels. "
It Arrivieth Now.
It's pretty amusing you'd go to all the trouble to look at Wikipedia and not read the first paragraph of the article itself. That takes some dedicated ignoring there.
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Wow someone made a hot air balloon [youtube.com], parabolic antenna [youtube.com], and blew up a building [youtube.com] with this!
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You know, there's a hell of a lot of people who don't routinely surf Penny Arcade or Slashdot every day who would probably enjoy this work.
As your username indicates: fail.
Re:Crayon Physics was new in 2007 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Crayon Physics was new in 2007 (Score:5, Insightful)
But the upgraded/final release came out just now and Penny Arcade covered that as well (just 6 days ago).
http://www.penny-arcade.com/2009/1/9/ [penny-arcade.com]
http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2009/1/9/ [penny-arcade.com]
also you find what a rhombus is.
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After discovering Crayon Physics last week I found another similar game called Zany Doodle. Check out these amazing videos of many types of engines, and even fusion & fission [youtube.com] done with Zany Doodle [zanydoodle.com].
magic pen (Score:2, Insightful)
sounds like the author is
fan of the flash game Magic Pen.
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I tried magic pen and its first level was extremely similar to the first one they show in Crayon Physics' trailor.
Game: http://magic.pen.fizzlebot.com/ [fizzlebot.com]
Review: http://jayisgames.com/archives/2008/04/magic_pen.php [jayisgames.com]
I wonder if Alejandro Guillen could go to courts over this...
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I wonder if Alejandro Guillen could go to courts over this...
He certainly could but as Crayon physics was released first (as stated in the review you linked), I don't fancy his odds of winning.
Re:magic pen (Score:4, Funny)
Yes, well...
As a slashdotter, I don't even read my own linked articles.
So, good point.
Looks good for kids learning about gravity... (Score:1, Informative)
Seeing as "behaves pysically correct" only really means that objects don't "merge" and gravity affects them as expected (although there doesn't seem to be any friction built in - it looks like slow rolling objects on a flat surface roll for a very long time!) - the game still seems good for kids who are learning about gravity and helps to illict their creativity/drawing skills as well. Looks good. Kudos to the developer.
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helps to illic[i]t their creativity/drawing skills as well
I suppose it depends what you are drawing, but for now, most drawings are legal.
(I think you were looking for "elicit").
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The Australian supreme court might have a different opinion [theage.com.au] on the gravity of your drawings.
My inner 12-year-old... (Score:5, Funny)
Other games based on box2d library (Score:4, Interesting)
Nokia Internet Tablet and Openmoko Neo FreeRunner owners might be interested in Numpty Physics: http://numptyphysics.garage.maemo.org/ [maemo.org] & http://www.cs.helsinki.fi/u/rantalai/freerunner/numptyphysics/ [helsinki.fi]
Numpty Physics: Not just handhelds (Score:1)
Months ago, I installed Numpty Physics [maemo.org] and a substantial portion of NP-complete [maemo.org] (the levels that didn't crash) on the computers at a tutorial center. For reference, they run Windows, except for a Pentium II that I "donated," running Xubuntu.
Now, it's the most popular computer pastime among both the kids and the (high school, lower-division college student) tutors.
I haven't worked out how to introduce level editing to them, yet.
Wow (Score:2)
Game version of Phun? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Fantastic Contraption is better (Score:1, Interesting)
So it's like Fantastic Contraption [fantasticcontraption.com] but with crayons. Yawn.
touch physics for iPod and iPhone (Score:1)
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I recall playing a free game like this via Installer long before the app store was live. I could have sworn it was just called "crayon physics" though...the one I'm thinking of had a pretty big repository of addon levels and puzzles.
Does not work under Wine (Score:2, Insightful)
Gets the music but black screen.
Too bad the author did not develop the game multi-platform :(
For an independent game developer it is quite sad to lose the opportunity to cater an audience (OSX and Linux users) that is lacking (AAA) games and probably quite interested in this kind of physics-based yet casual game altogether.
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Seems to work for others though:
http://www.vimeo.com/2828541
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Does not work under Wine
Too bad the author did not develop the game multi-platform :(
Yes it is a shame. But what does it have to do with Wine? You're talking about two different subjects: a) Will the game run under Wine; and b) is the game cross-platform. Obviously the cross-platform approach is ideal (and I agree with you I think). But you're conflating two different subjects. A program able to run under Wine is not cross-platform.
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Works for me under Wine
(Ubuntu 9.04)
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> (Ubuntu 9.04)
you wish!
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I wish what?...
using Jaunty alpha
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Is there a Mac / Linux port
Unfortunately not at this moment. I'm planning of doing these as soon as I'm done with the PC version of the game, but I can't promise anything at this point.
Also, since there is an iPhone
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Depends... (Score:2)
If you are a guy - you are gay.
If you are a girl - there will be so much empty space around it on your screen it will look even smaller.
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Well you know my name is Simon
And things I draw come true
And the pictures take me, take me, climbing
Over the garden wall with you.
I've seen a current American take on it, something called ChalkZone. I don't care for it.
ChalkZone (Score:2)
This sounds like it might be similar Nickelodeon's ChalkZone [wikipedia.org] series. (almost too similar, actually...)
I'm somewhat amazed and disappointed they never gave ChalkZone its own game though. Something in a vein similar to Drawn to Life [wikipedia.org], Magic Pengel [wikipedia.org] or the upcoming Scribblenauts [wikipedia.org]. (That honor went to Spongebob Squarepants, instead.)
It's too bad, since the show itself is basically a detailed manual for designing a very cool game concept. Crayon Physics definitely comes close to the idea, but would simply need to a
Damn that game is addictive (Score:2)
I just downloaded the demo to try it out and spent an hour. It's like the old bridge building games. Fun with gravity! Not sure how realistic the physics are... but who cares? It's midnight Slashdotting :)
Penny Arcade (Score:1)
Penny Arcade ran that about a week ago. http://penny-arcade.com/comic/2009/1/9/ [penny-arcade.com]
Whoah, slashvertisement (Score:2)
CP won a game award in 2008, same as World Of Goo (http://worldofgoo.com) -- both are awesome games, both promised to create a Linux client and both cost me $20.
Here's to hoping the small indie shops get more exposure. And even more hoping to them open sourcing their stuff after some time :)
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Both promised me personally. Only after that did I pre-order to help them get over the half to full year of unemployment when they made their games.
As an aside, Crayon Physics introduced me to lullaby by _ghost -- freely available on CCMixter and easily in my personal Top 5 _ever_.
Anti-Tetris with physics! (Score:1)
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Slick. You event loop stinks though (there are plenty of games on Kongregate that actually do nothing when they are doing nothing).
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It consumes 100% cpu at the opening screen. "It's a physics game" doesn't really work at that point.
And really, instead of imagining it not running, I don't bother running poorly written flash.
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I don't think you are a retard.
That said, are you really sure that your event loop cannot be improved?
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For reference sake, 100% of 1 core on an Intel Core Duo at 1.66 GHz, with 2 Gig of ram and intel integrated graphics (a not that ancient laptop...).
Mesmerizing is the word (Score:1)
My two cents (Score:2)
Great game. Totally got me hooked after trying the demo. However:
- Way too easy. Or should I say, way too short. I finished the full game in just over 4 hours. And 1 of those hours was when I got stuck trying to force the intended solution for one level, finally got angry and came up with my own solution (One of the rocket levels, ended up not using the rocket). - No, I was right the first time; way too easy. Once you find out you can pin stuff and lift the ball just using small 'lifts', it
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They really forgot to include the fun in this game. As soon as you pin a couple walls you can draw boulders and lift the ball to any star no problem. Most of the interesting "tricks" they show you in a lot of levels depend on there being premade pins to drop stuff over, etc as trying to create your own breaks the "physics"
Add a Wii Controller (Score:3, Interesting)
I used the Crayon Physics demo to try Johnny Lee's whiteboard hack [cmu.edu]. I was primarily interested in the whiteboard hack and wanted something interesting running so I could watch different people using the IR pen I had built to see what limitations it had. The game drew enough people into it that they completely forgot about how they were interacting with it that I figured the hack as a win.
fwiw, I used a key ring led [amazon.com] to house the IR Led and battery. It took about 5 minutes to swap the white light led with an IR led. My cell phone could see the IR led light up which told me I had done that part of the hack right later on when I had problems with a Broadcom Bluetooth driver.
adaptation to ipod (Score:2)
physics of drawings (Score:5, Funny)
'You draw stuff and your drawings behave physically correctly. As soon as you release the last button, the laws of physics are applied to your drawing.'
MARVEL at the way the virtual crayon material seems to adhere motionlessly to the virtual paper! THRILL as the virtual pigments simulate the refraction of light at different wavelengths!
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Meh. I'll wait for the open source knock-off.
If its true to form, it might not work precisely correctly out of the box, but you will be able to enter the initial conditions for the Universe. For example, you could interchange the masses of the up and down quark, or alter the U(1) gauge coupling parameter from 0.357 to 0.5. Once you have managed to get the laws of physics as we know them to emerge, you will be able to play a game with correct physics for our Universe.
Or maybe it would be more fun to p
"Fun Physics" (Score:2)
There was something like this called "Fun Physics", from Knowledge Revolution, in 1988, for the Mac. (!) That eventually became Working Model, a 2D engineering simulator. Knowledge Revolution was acquired by McNeil Schwindler, the price of Working Model was increased by a factor of 10, and the game product disappeared.
No Linux port (Score:1)