Saturday, January 9, 2021

Lode Runner: Quicklode

For the sake of my time and sanity, I've relaxed my 30-minute saving rule to 20 minutes. Following the original rule strictly, my minutes all too often looked like this:

  • +0 minutes: Load a saved game at level 85, with 5 lives remaining.
  • +4 minutes: Beat the level 85, reloading after each failure.
  • +19 minutes: Beat level 86 after multiple attempts.
  • +20 minutes: Beat level 87 which turned out to be quite easy.
  • +25 minutes: Run out of lives on level 88. Reload.
  • +31 minutes: Re-beat level 85. Save on level 86 with 6 lives remaining.
  • +39 minutes: Re-beat level 86.
  • +40 minutes: Re-beat level 87.
  • +48 minutes: Beat level 88.
  • +57 minutes: Run out of lives on level 89. Reload save on level 86.
  • +59 minutes: Re-beat level 86.
  • +61 minutes: Re-beat level 87. Save on level 88 with 8 lives remaining.
 

That's a net gain of three levels in one hour of play, and only two of them were not trivially easy. To be fair, I've also learned how to beat level 88, seen level 89, and between this increased knowledge and my surplus of lives, I'll be better equipped to beat level 89 during my next session. This sort of glacial progress got me through Miner 2049er and Jumpman, but I've still got 63 Lode Runner levels to go! For now, a save every 20 minutes feels like a good compromise so that I can finish this game before I've spent more time on it than I spent playing Morrowind.

 

Continuing my pattern of writing whenever I feel like it:


This brain-shaped level isn't all that taxing on the little grey cells, but does have several false bricks to trip you up. To solve the level you'll want to take as few trips to the ground floor as possible, because the center ladder is the only way back up, and if all three guards get between it and you, you're sunk.


86 presents an interesting brain teaser. Just how are you supposed to get the inside the lower-left partition? Dig a space above it and drop through, and you're stuck. You could dig away the left wall first, but then you wouldn't be able to climb up and onto the wall to get the crate in the first place. The solution here is pretty clever and something I haven't seen yet - you do in fact dig away the left wall from the ladder, but before blasting the bottom tile, wait until the top one is about to respawn. If timed properly, the top two tiles will respawn, the bottom one won't for awhile, and you'll have time to grab the crate and leave through the left.


90 is hard! So many secret false bricks will drop you to your doom, like one below the lower-most crate that will drop you onto an non-diggable surface where guards might flank you from the directions of both ladders. Then there's a pocket on the upper-right of the board where multiple guards tend to get trapped as the stage drags on, making it an interesting challenge to snatch the crate inside without getting killed, and then get out. And there's a false brick above that pocket that will drop you right inside if you don't know it's there.


92 was just a bizarre level, all owing to the single tile-wide gap in the lower floor. The only way to reach the left side of the level is by getting a guard to fall into that gap and crossing over his head. The problem is, guards won't walk into pits that you didn't dig! And yet if you dig a hole just to the right of it, in this case one might. But then you'd have to find a way to get him out of that pit, and get him to drop the crate somewhere you can retrieve it, and I found that by the time I was ready to do this, I often had two guards "stuck" on the left-most ladder, their pathfinding logic utterly broken by the gap that could be spanned by walking across their comrade's head. I didn't feel like I "solved" this level so much as I messed around until the guards were cooperative with my goals.

 

In level 99 it's very easy to get the guards permanently trapped in the gaps between the "teeth" in the middle-right section and in the pit on the lower-right, which has a roof of false bricks. In fact it's difficult not to get them trapped this way. One problem - if they're carrying gold when they fall in, it's gone and you're stuck. And the leftmost guard is certain to pick up a crate. So you'll need to get it back before trapping them. Do this right and you're good.


Level 109 just gave me a headache from trying to read all this nonsense going on. Apart from that, the main difficulty here is that the guards tend to get stuck on the pockets on the lower left and right, and the only way out is through the bottom-center passage that connects them to the rest of the level. If you can lure them out, grab the crates inside, and leave without getting killed, then the rest of it isn't very hard, just confusing.


I'm now at level 124, and it's getting pretty difficult. Over the past eight saves, representing over 2 hours 40 minutes of play, I've advanced a mere 17 levels. I'm also finding that luck plays more of a role - whenever you kill a guard, the respawn location is random, and sometimes you need them to die and respawn in locations you can't reach yourself to retrieve crates there, and you have no control over that. Other times you just need to trap and kill a whole bunch of guards that are in your way and can't be evaded, and just have to hope the places they respawn doesn't put them even more in your way.

It's also not much fun to slog through any more. But the end's in sight, and I figure I can wrap this up in a few days.

7 comments:

  1. If it's not much fun, why not play something else for a while, then return to it?

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    Replies
    1. I'll admit, I could have done a better job pacing myself over the past few days. It was more fun when I wasn't pushing myself to power through to the end, and I plan to take it a little easier for the last set of levels. But I also know that if I set this aside and start on something else for the blog, I'll never finish it.

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  2. I feel like you're encountering something that I've had problems with in my own blogging, the tension between wanting to finish things but also wondering if it's worth your time to finish them. Good luck.

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  3. I suggest removing the "save after 30m" rule from your blogging. There is no point in having it if you don't follow own guidelines.

    I'm very curious how you'll manage logic/puzzle games. Not 20 levels of Sokoban but 87 levels of The Incredible Machine or 120 levels of Lemmings. If 2h 40m for beating 17 levels (~9 minutes per level) is too slow for you what will you do when you were trying to beat the hardest brain teasers of aforementioned games? And they are not the hardest ones. Will you stop playing because the further part of a title does not introduce new game mechanics? Or maybe will you look for a solution in internet? These type of games are designed to be difficult. They should take months to complete. Consulting a walkthrough of an adventure game resolves a specific problem but for a logic/puzzle game it solves the entire level for you.

    Like the first poster suggested speedrunning long and difficult games may burn you out. It's better to make small steps forward than walk with 8-mile boots of boredom.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I forgot about one thing. Why were you savescumming when every level is available from the Main Menu? You have mentioned that only starting from the very beginning gives a high score. That would be understandable if your playthrough was legit. It wasn't. Cheating makes your high score invalid.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. There is no point in having it if you don't follow own guidelines.
      I disagree. The point isn't to make my victories "legit," but to encourage authentic play, to an extent. Gaining lives in Lode Runner is meaningless if you savescum constantly, but with the 30m rule, having more lives means more chances to beat newly reached levels and less time spent reloading and replaying already beaten levels. The rule forced me to play Wizardry III cautiously, as it was meant to be played, albeit without the intentional threat of total catastrophe, which can occur through no fault of your own.

      For logic puzzles, I'll probably look up videos when I get bored. The nice thing about video solutions is that they don't have to spoil the entire level - you can follow along until you reach a point where the video does something you hadn't thought of, and then see if you can figure the rest out yourself. For the record, I've beaten both Lemmings and The Incredible Machine without any external help, though both games' sequels proved too much.

      As for your last question, there's two reasons why I didn't just use the level select. First, because that would have made entirely different gameplay dynamic, where death has absolutely no consequence, and gaining lives serves no purpose. Second, I wanted to see if what happens if you beat all of the levels from the start - turns out it's nothing, but I had to know. Having a "valid" high score wasn't a motivation.

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    2. Thanks for the explanation. Seems like my interpretation of savescumming was incorrect. You have pointed out an interesting aspect of playing from start to finish. After reading your first Lode Runner post I had an impression that the game wasn't designed to be completed in one go when neither even limited save option (like Ultima) nor level codes every X levels were implemented. It would be madness.

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