4.2 KiB
4.2 KiB
Doodle
Doodle is a drawing-based maze game written in Go.
Features
(Eventually), the high-level, user-facing features for the game are:
- Draw your own levels freehand and then play them like a 2D platformer game.
- In Adventure Mode you can play through a series of official example levels that ship with the game.
- In Edit Mode you can draw a map freehand-style and lay down physical geometry, and mark which lines are solid or which ones behave like fire.
- Drag and drop Doodads like buttons, doors and keys into your level and link them together so that buttons open doors and levers activate devices.
- In Play Mode you can play your level as a 2D platformer game where you collect keys, watch out for enemies, and solve puzzles to get to the exit.
- Easily Share your custom maps with friends.
Mod-friendly
- Users can create Custom Doodads to extend the game with a scripting language like JavaScript. The sprites and animations are edited in-game in Edit Mode, but the scripting is done in your text editor.
- In Edit Mode you can drag custom doodads into your maps.
- To Share your maps, you can choose to bundle the custom doodads inside your map file itself, so that other players can play the map without needing to install the doodads separately.
- If you receive a map with custom doodads, you can install the doodads into your copy of the game and use them in your own maps.
Keybindings
Global Keybindings:
Escape
Close the developer console if open, without running any commands.
Exit the program otherwise.
Enter
Open and close the developer console, and run commands while the console
is open.
In Play Mode:
Cursor Keys
Move the player around.
In Edit Mode:
F12
Take a screenshot (generate a PNG based on level data)
Developer Console
Press Enter
at any time to open the developer console.
Commands supported:
new
Create a new map in Edit Mode.
save [filename.json]
Save the current map in Edit Mode. The filename is required if the map has
not been saved yet.
edit [filename.json]
Open a map in Edit Mode.
play [filename.json]
Open a map in Play Mode.
exit
quit
Close the developer console.
Milestones
As a rough idea of the milestones needed for this game to work:
SDL Paint Program
- Create a basic SDL window that you can click on to color pixels.
- Connect the pixels while the mouse is down to cover gaps.
- Implement a "screenshot" button that translates the canvas to a PNG
image on disk.
F12
key to take a screenshot of your drawing.- It reproduces a PNG image using its in-memory knowledge of the pixels you have drawn, not by reading the SDL canvas. This will be important for making the custom level format later.
- The PNG I draw looks slightly different to what you see on the SDL canvas;
maybe difference between
Renderer.DrawLine()
and my own algorithm or the anti-aliasing.
- Create a custom map file format (protobufs maybe) and "screenshot" the canvas into this custom file format.
- Make the program able to read this file format and reproduce the same pixels on the canvas.
- Abstract away SDL logic into a small corner so it can be replaced with OpenGL or something later on.
- Implement a command line shell in-game to ease development before a user
interface is created.
- Add support for the shell to pop itself open and ask the user for input prompts.
Platformer
- Inflate the pixel history from the map file into a full lookup grid
of
(X,Y)
coordinates. This will be useful for collision detection. - Create a dummy player character sprite, probably just a
render.Circle()
. In Play Mode run collision checks and gravity on the player sprite. - Get basic movement and collision working. With a cleanup this can make a workable ALPHA RELEASE
- Wrap a Qt GUI around the SDL window to make the Edit Mode easier to work with, with toolbars to select brushes and doodads and junk.
- Work on support for solid vs. transparent, fire, etc. geometry.
- ???
Building
Fedora dependencies:
$ sudo dnf install SDL2-devel SDL2_ttf-devel