For example, you can now make connections with the connection tool.
Remarkable.
Unfortunately, implicit connections aren't updated as you edit the level
yet.
Also came with some refactors for searching a level and whatnot.
Similar to a dirt block, but stores the first item it moves over, dropping it when destroyed and cloning it in a cloning machine. Has ice block/frame block collision. Turns into floor in water. Doesn't have dirt block immunities.
When placed atop an item, you must have that item to enter the tile. When you do, pay the item and destroy the item lock. Also can be placed on top of a bonus, and you must pay that amount of bonus to enter.
Similar to a dirt block, but rolls when pushed. Boulders transfer momentum to each other. Has ice block/frame block collision. Turns into gravel in water. Spreads slime.
Cracked Ice: Turns into water when something steps off of it (except ghosts).
Also had to implement slide_ignores/item_slide_ignores since I needed a way to ignore static aspects of the tile without preventing its functions from being called. there's probably a better way IDK
This better matches CC2 behavior and also makes some very common
operations, like grabbing a cell's actor or terrain, way faster.
It also allows me to efficiently implement CC2's layer order when
checking for collisions; thin walls are checked before terrain, and
actors only afterwards. The upshot is that bowling balls no longer
destroy stuff on the other side of a thin wall!
I also did some minor optimizing, mostly by turning loops over an entire
cell's contents into checks for a single layer; Chromium now performs a
bulk test about 30% faster.
Downsides of this change:
- All kinds of stuff may have broken!
- It'll be a little difficult to ever emulate MSCC's curious behavior
when stacking terrain on top of items or other terrain. But not
impossible.
- It'll be far more difficult to emulate buggy Lynx (or maybe it's just
Tile World?) behavior where some combination of cloners and teleports
allow a ton of monsters to accumulate in a few cells. I guess I
wasn't planning on doing that anyway.