CONTROLS
Mac was the last platform I was introduced to, so I am more of an iOS kind of guy. I do photo editing on my iPad Pro, but I hear that the iMac is good for that as well. I have a Mac Mini right now for anything my iPad can't do, but the iMac has always looked beautiful and I'm thinking of getting an iMac. OS: Windows 7 or Above, Mac Os (only the versions that supports 32 bit apps, I'll try to make it in 64 bit, of course if it's possible), Android 5 or above, IOS 9 or above. Memory: 1 GB RAM Graphics: 128 MB. Science-based games. The list is essentially about educational based games that nailed entertainment (with a focus on scientific phenomenon). mettamage on HN Here is a collaborative notepad with educational/science games, i.e.
- Mouse: Aim
- Right Mouse Button (HELD): Thrust
- Right Mouse Button (CLICK): Repair Engine
- Left Mouse Button / Spacebar: Shoot
- R Key: Restart
Breaker Breaker is our LD39 submission, where you control a plane with a terrible engine that breaks down constantly. Reach max altitude to beat the stage. And don't worry, your engine will break down!
Ludum Dare 39 Theme: 'Running Out Of Power'
![Ludum Ludum](https://preview.redd.it/a2s57f4kfg951.png?width=1024&format=png&auto=webp&s=eef8c7e6e2df518abc0ee4973d6d6b1774a2bcca)
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While this isn't my first game, it's my first game jam prototype where much of the intended design actually made it in the game. In addition, it's Martin's first video game and first game jam participation! Despite it's unfinished state, there's lots for us to be proud of. We hope to release a more polished version by the end of August, which you can expect on Team Giga Chocones mac os. 's itch page. Core defense: prelude mac os.
Thanks for playing and rating!
Contributors:
- Robert D (@flying_meta): Game Design, Art, Audio SFX, Unity/C# Assist
- Martin R (@pacosmartini): Unity/C# Programming, Design
- Music: https://opengameart.org/content/bananenwurscht
Tools:
- Unity2D
- Visual Studio
- Aseprite
- BFXR
- Google Docs
- Trello
- Discord / Google Hangouts
- OpenGameArt.com
Update v1.1
- Fixed UI bugs where the health/engine bars were too big, and the altimeter was half covered up.
- Fixed screen resolution bug where the play area was skewed and the left/right border collisions were closer inward, resulting in bounce-back in the middle of the screen.
- Updated UX to better reflect player actions.
- Tweaked debris values and spawn rate to increase challenge over time.
- Added a Victory condition.
- Balanced gun: degrades engine during use and disabled when engine breaks down.
Breaker Breaker (ludum Dare 39) Mac Os Update
Status | Prototype |
Platforms | Windows, macOS, Linux, HTML5 |
Rating | |
Author | FlyingFlambe |
Genre | Action |
Made with | Unity |
Tags | 4-bit, Arcade, Flight, Game Boy, ld39, Ludum Dare 39, Retro |
Links | Ludum Dare |
Download
Breaker Breaker (ludum Dare 39) Mac Os Download
Development log
- BBreaker! : v1.1 UpdateAug 03, 2017
Ludum Dare 48
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Hello! I really enjoyed your game, it was very fun to play and looked awesome! I made a let's play of your game here-
Ludum Dare Jam
Dare to be Creative’s Parachute is a new, useful, US$39 backup application for Mac OS X. Designed by Apple Design Award Winner Dietmar Kerschner, it allows users to easily run automated, scheduled backups to a wide range of destinations, including FTP/SFTP servers, external disks, and iDisk.
With Parachute you can back up files to your Mac and to devices connected to your Mac. This includes your hard disk, disk partitions, flash cards, USB memory sticks, network volumes and external hard disks. The app is flexible and user friendly.
As an example, to backup files to your Mac:
Choose Tasks > New Backup Task.
Enter a name for the backup task and press Return.
Drag in the files or folders you wish to backup.
Click Destination, and then select “On This Mac”.
Click Choose Folder, choose the folder you want to backup to, and then click Choose.
Parachute sports the useful feature of allowing you to authenticate yourself to SFTP servers with SSH identity files. If your identity file is in a standard location (~/.ssh/id_rsa or ~/.ssh/id_dsa) then Parachute will automatically use these. If your identity file is in a non-standard location you can configure the location in the Preferences.
If you’re a MobileMe customer you can backup files to your iDisk with Parachute. MobileMe is Apple’s US$99 per year suite of Internet services. What’s more, with Parachute you can backup files to FTP, SFTP, and WebDAV servers. However, note that you have to specify an absolute path in the Remote Path field.
Parachute can also handle “smart” back-ups. By default the app copies all the source files and folders when you run a backup task. For large data such as music and photo collections, this can take a loooong time. Enable smart backups and only the changes to your source files are backed up. For example, if you use Parachute to backup your music collection and add a song to that collection, then only that song will be copied on the next backup. However—and this isn’t a complaint, but an observation—you can’t have both smart backups and keep-the-last-backups enabled.
Frigid mac os. What’s more, if you have files in your backup source folder that you don’t want to backup then you can tell Parachute to ignore these files. Once you do, starting with the next backup these files will be ignored and no longer copied to your backup destination.
If you’ve been backing up your files with Parachute, you can recover lost or accidentally deleted files and folders. For local or iDisk backups, use the Finder to open the backup location. For remote backups, login to your server with your favorite FTP application (Dare to be Creative recommends Cyberduck or Transmit; I use the latter) and open the backup folder.
Backups are stored in folders named after the time they were created. Open the folder from which you wish to restore your files, then copy the items you wish to restore.
You can schedule Parachute to run backup tasks automatically at set times (hourly, daily, weekly or monthly). Or you can do it manually via a “Backup Now” button.
Parachute requires Mac OS X 10.5 or higher. It’s Universal Binary so runs natively on both PowerPC and Intel Macs. A 15-day demo is available for download.
All in all, Parachute is efficient, useful and easy to learn. However, you can’t do full drive, bootable backups, which could be a deal breaker for some people. Also, it doesn’t have an “unzip archive” feature, which would certainly come in handy at times.
If the lack of features don’t concern you, give Parachute a try. You may also want to compare it to other back-up apps such as SuperDuper ($27.95), Carbon Copy Cloner ($10), SugarSync ($99.95 annually), Synchronize Pro X ($99.95 annually), Norton Online Back, BackBlaze ($5 per month per computer), BackJack ($17.50 monthly for up to 1GB compressed and $2.75 for each additional GB up to 15) or Shadow 3 (pricing starts at $29.99).
With Parachute you can back up files to your Mac and to devices connected to your Mac. This includes your hard disk, disk partitions, flash cards, USB memory sticks, network volumes and external hard disks. The app is flexible and user friendly.
As an example, to backup files to your Mac:
Choose Tasks > New Backup Task.
Enter a name for the backup task and press Return.
Drag in the files or folders you wish to backup.
Click Destination, and then select “On This Mac”.
Click Choose Folder, choose the folder you want to backup to, and then click Choose.
Parachute sports the useful feature of allowing you to authenticate yourself to SFTP servers with SSH identity files. If your identity file is in a standard location (~/.ssh/id_rsa or ~/.ssh/id_dsa) then Parachute will automatically use these. If your identity file is in a non-standard location you can configure the location in the Preferences.
If you’re a MobileMe customer you can backup files to your iDisk with Parachute. MobileMe is Apple’s US$99 per year suite of Internet services. What’s more, with Parachute you can backup files to FTP, SFTP, and WebDAV servers. However, note that you have to specify an absolute path in the Remote Path field.
Parachute can also handle “smart” back-ups. By default the app copies all the source files and folders when you run a backup task. For large data such as music and photo collections, this can take a loooong time. Enable smart backups and only the changes to your source files are backed up. For example, if you use Parachute to backup your music collection and add a song to that collection, then only that song will be copied on the next backup. However—and this isn’t a complaint, but an observation—you can’t have both smart backups and keep-the-last-backups enabled.
Frigid mac os. What’s more, if you have files in your backup source folder that you don’t want to backup then you can tell Parachute to ignore these files. Once you do, starting with the next backup these files will be ignored and no longer copied to your backup destination.
If you’ve been backing up your files with Parachute, you can recover lost or accidentally deleted files and folders. For local or iDisk backups, use the Finder to open the backup location. For remote backups, login to your server with your favorite FTP application (Dare to be Creative recommends Cyberduck or Transmit; I use the latter) and open the backup folder.
Backups are stored in folders named after the time they were created. Open the folder from which you wish to restore your files, then copy the items you wish to restore.
You can schedule Parachute to run backup tasks automatically at set times (hourly, daily, weekly or monthly). Or you can do it manually via a “Backup Now” button.
Parachute requires Mac OS X 10.5 or higher. It’s Universal Binary so runs natively on both PowerPC and Intel Macs. A 15-day demo is available for download.
All in all, Parachute is efficient, useful and easy to learn. However, you can’t do full drive, bootable backups, which could be a deal breaker for some people. Also, it doesn’t have an “unzip archive” feature, which would certainly come in handy at times.
If the lack of features don’t concern you, give Parachute a try. You may also want to compare it to other back-up apps such as SuperDuper ($27.95), Carbon Copy Cloner ($10), SugarSync ($99.95 annually), Synchronize Pro X ($99.95 annually), Norton Online Back, BackBlaze ($5 per month per computer), BackJack ($17.50 monthly for up to 1GB compressed and $2.75 for each additional GB up to 15) or Shadow 3 (pricing starts at $29.99).