Lost game from the '80s: Scumbotron!
Forum rules
This section is for testing Commander X16 programs and programs related to the CX16 for other platforms (compilers, data conversion tools, etc.)
Feel free to post works in progress, test builds, prototypes, and tech demos.
Finished works go in the Downloads category. Don't forget to add a hashtag (#) and the version number your program was meant to run on. (ie: #R41).
This section is for testing Commander X16 programs and programs related to the CX16 for other platforms (compilers, data conversion tools, etc.)
Feel free to post works in progress, test builds, prototypes, and tech demos.
Finished works go in the Downloads category. Don't forget to add a hashtag (#) and the version number your program was meant to run on. (ie: #R41).
- ahenry3068
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Re: Lost game from the '80s: Scumbotron!
Alternatively same approach but have all your code and graphics in 1 file but write a separate "loader" again utilize banked ram for some code
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Re: Lost game from the '80s: Scumbotron!
Now playable https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wik5QBKo2SIEyeballKid wrote: ↑Tue Apr 23, 2024 9:19 pmOh! I missed that - it looks fantastic!paulscottrobson wrote: ↑Tue Apr 23, 2024 5:03 pm My (Neo6502) version, not quite complete. No Brains .... and obviously no collision detection which makes surviving easy but scoring a bit difficult.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tzpN1NQkSEk
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- Joined: Sat Jul 29, 2023 8:29 am
Re: Lost game from the '80s: Scumbotron!
TL;DR: I'm too lazy.ahenry3068 wrote: ↑Sat Apr 27, 2024 3:28 pm Offload the graphics and maybe some of the code to a separate file. Put less used routines in banked ram
Separate files are cheating!
I decided pretty early on that getting it into a nice single .prg file would be a nicely arbitrary restriction.
My self-decompressing .prg file is only 35KB, which does leave a few more KB of compressed data to play with (could squeeze maybe 10-15KB of new code in there, I'd say).
But the existing code already decompresses to the full 40KB, so any new code would have to go into banked ram, which would just be a bit of a pain. Even just using a single bank (an extra 8KB), it's outside the otherwise-continuous address space, so there'd be a lot of hoop-jumping to get routines properly located. Even more so if I ended up actually having to do bank switching. It'd be easy enough to do in assembly... but... well... I'm old and lazy now. Even if I like the idea of writing games in 6502 assembly, there's no way I'm actually prepared to actually _do_ it I can't really bring myself to write anything that's not portable these days.
- ahenry3068
- Posts: 1136
- Joined: Tue Apr 04, 2023 9:57 pm
Re: Lost game from the '80s: Scumbotron!
I mentioned this earlier but are you loading your code from $0400. If your loading it at $0800 or $0801 your missing out on 1 contiguous Kilobyte you could be using. $0400 was Video Ram on the c64. $0400 to $07FF are unused RAM on the X16EyeballKid wrote: ↑Sun Apr 28, 2024 11:14 amTL;DR: I'm too lazy.ahenry3068 wrote: ↑Sat Apr 27, 2024 3:28 pm Offload the graphics and maybe some of the code to a separate file. Put less used routines in banked ram
Separate files are cheating!
I decided pretty early on that getting it into a nice single .prg file would be a nicely arbitrary restriction.
My self-decompressing .prg file is only 35KB, which does leave a few more KB of compressed data to play with (could squeeze maybe 10-15KB of new code in there, I'd say).
But the existing code already decompresses to the full 40KB, so any new code would have to go into banked ram, which would just be a bit of a pain. Even just using a single bank (an extra 8KB), it's outside the otherwise-continuous address space, so there'd be a lot of hoop-jumping to get routines properly located. Even more so if I ended up actually having to do bank switching. It'd be easy enough to do in assembly... but... well... I'm old and lazy now. Even if I like the idea of writing games in 6502 assembly, there's no way I'm actually prepared to actually _do_ it I can't really bring myself to write anything that's not portable these days.
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- Posts: 18
- Joined: Sat Jul 29, 2023 8:29 am
Re: Lost game from the '80s: Scumbotron!
I've put the source code up on github if anyone's interested: https://github.com/bcampbell/scumbotron
Requires llvm-mos-sdk and golang to build.
Requires llvm-mos-sdk and golang to build.