It's happening consistently for me on your new games in itch on Windows 10, Chrome 124.0.6367.60 (Official Build) (64-bit). Console shows the error "Uncaught (in promise) DOMException: screen.orientation.lock() is not available on this device."
Noyb
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Loving the atmosphere so far, but starting with the assassins segment (on the Windows 10 download version, played through the itch app), I keep getting this error every few seconds:
I thought it was an intentional glitch effect at first, but it kept going through the next few floors and during the dialogue sections?
I don't see a Darkness.ogg in the bgs folder, although there are a few numbered ones in the audio/se folder.
Nice work! My favorite level was the one with the malfunctioning droid, good use of bespoke rules in service of telling a story. Only things that felt a little arbitrary by the end is exactly how the teleporting computers work, and which codes map to which keypads in the last level.
Possible bug: I finished the (last?) level but it softlocked when I stepped on the exit tile. Pressing the Boss Key somehow still worked, producing this ominous screen on return. I was able to save quit with ESC and see the ending upon continuing. This is with the web version on Windows 10 Chrome, FWIW.
Played on Windows 10 in the itch app using mouse and keyboard and a NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1660 Ti.
Got repeated errors pop up in the Development Console the first time I tried to move: "ArgumentOutOfRangeException: Specified argument was out of the range of valid values. Parameter name: index"
In the Player.log file in my LocalLow\Studio Hunty\Compasscope folder:
<RI> Initializing input.
New input system (experimental) initialized
<RI> Initialized touch support.
WARNING: Shader Unsupported: 'Hidden/Nature/Terrain/Utilities' - All passes removed
WARNING: Shader Did you use #pragma only_renderers and omit this platform?
ERROR: Shader Hidden/Nature/Terrain/Utilities shader is not supported on this GPU (none of subshaders/fallbacks are suitable)
UnloadTime: 1.847400 ms
ArgumentOutOfRangeException: Specified argument was out of the range of valid values.
Parameter name: index
at UnityEngine.InputSystem.Utilities.ReadOnlyArray`1[TValue].get_Item (System.Int32 index) [0x0004c] in C:\projects\unity\compasscope\Library\PackageCache\[email protected]\InputSystem\Utilities\ReadOnlyArray.cs:123
at MainGameInputHandler.ControlForAction (MainGameInputHandler Action action) [0x00001] in C:\projects\unity\compasscope\Assets\Scripts\Input\MainGameInputHandler.cs:72
at ControlIconBehavior.Update () [0x00001] in C:\projects\unity\compasscope\Assets\Scripts\UI\ControlIconBehavior.cs:31
(Filename: C:/projects/unity/compasscope/Library/PackageCache/[email protected]/InputSystem/Utilities/ReadOnlyArray.cs Line: 123)
All of the onscreen non-mouse button prompts were for the "W" key, but I was able to figure out the controls, connect the three landmarks and open the door. Using the telescope as a lever is a clever bit of gating, but the central triangulation puzzle basically solves itself at this point.
Omeganaut, Gunducky Industries, or Sky Rogue?
If not, there's also a good browser for the bundle at https://randombundlegame.com/browse, and you can poke around itch for other games tagged On Rail Shooter: https://itch.io/games/tag-on-rails-shooter.
974.98 seconds
50 deaths
Good fun! I like the platforming bits as a light, low-stakes way to teach the player how their momentum works before the main event bosses. Toughest bit with the dragon is when it lays homing bullets two rounds in a row. Beat it by getting lucky with a long string of 3-4 baitable green charges at the end without hitting that difficult pattern.
Finished! Enjoyed it so far. Found myself wanting the ability to differentiate between a tile that's blank because it's the default state, and blank because I've deduced it should be blank in the solution(s), mostly in the later B levels.
Alternate solutions for B4 and D7: https://imgur.com/a/3JbCg4a
I solved all but 21-23 after about 45 minutes of play.
As the puzzles became more complex, I found myself drawing symmetric patterns, making tiny tweaks, and hoping for the best. I like that the UI lets me make changes and retry even in the middle of a test run.
There were some good gags in the level progression, asking the player to resolve an older puzzle with less active tiles, or with an extra generation (solving a previous level's solution), or revealing that the pattern is a glider or stable oscillator within the required number of generations.
I did expect skipped levels to be visually differentiated from the others in the level select, so I know which ones to go back to. And solved levels to keep their solution, since some of the later levels riff on earlier ones, and it'd be nice to refer back to them without relying on my own memory.
Overall, nice work!
Used a setup like this and kept the top two always on while conditionally toggling the lower four to spread the load. Ultimately found myself rate-limited here by the top two being solely responsible for their own kills, but unable to find another spot where they could also potentially finish later kills without giving up too much initial damage.
Neat. So it's easy to "win" but the challenge comes from placing and disabling towers to balance their kills. And the only punishment for a missed enemy is that it might have added to the smallest tower's killcount.
Got 4572 = 127 * 6^2 after a few tries.
Exploit: you can make your score arbitrarily high by placing and deleting baby towers, since the tower count never goes down and deleted towers don't affect the minimum calculation.
I didn't see the end prompt until after finding the machine, so I viewed it as an amusing punchline recontextualizing the player character's situation.
If this were a game level, then the level design highlights the machine as a point of interest: jutting out of a flat field, the path toward it highlighted with three bright circular stones offset from the main trail. The machine itself feels like it's setting up the opening puzzle to an adventure game: unlabeled buttons, locked hinge, a warning on what to do before opening it. But it isn't a puzzle! It's just some inexplicable part of the real word, a configuration of physical objects fascinating enough to pry the player character away from a party, to forget whatever they were doing before and instead dedicate their whole focus on investigating this electric panel as if they *were* in a game.