Ghost piece: Difference between revisions

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*>Tepples
Description of movement; it helps beginners but hurts Tetris veterans who are new to SRS
*>Tepples
m migrating from what?
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As the player moves the falling piece, the ghost piece moves below it;
As the player moves the falling piece, the ghost piece moves below it;
when the piece falls far enough that it overlaps the ghost piece, the falling piece is always drawn in front.
when the piece falls far enough that it overlaps the ghost piece, the falling piece is always drawn in front.
Older [[games]] did not have a ghost piece, but all games that conform to the [[Tetris Guideline]] allow the player to use a ghost piece at all times, and ''[[Dr. Mario]]'' for Nintendo 64 has a ghost piece as well.
Older [[games]] did not have a ghost piece, but all games that conform to the [[Tetris Guideline]] allow the player to use a ghost piece at all times, and ''[[Dr. Mario]]'' for Nintendo 64 has a ghost piece as well.
The ghost piece reduces the number of [[misdrop]]s, especially for beginners or for high-speed players who use [[Drop#Hard drop|hard drop]], but some players who are migrating from other have trouble adjusting to the ghost piece when they fail to distinguish it from blocks in the playfield.
The ghost piece reduces the number of [[misdrop]]s, especially for beginners or for high-speed players who use [[Drop#Hard drop|hard drop]], but some players who are migrating from games without a ghost piece have trouble adjusting to the ghost piece when they fail to distinguish it from blocks in the playfield.
 
==See also==
==See also==
[[Topics]]
[[Topics]]

Revision as of 20:15, 27 August 2006

The Ghost piece, or ghost for short, also called shadow or TLS, is a representation of where a tetromino or other piece will land if allowed to drop into the playfield. It is generally colored fainter than the falling piece and the blocks in the playfield. As the player moves the falling piece, the ghost piece moves below it; when the piece falls far enough that it overlaps the ghost piece, the falling piece is always drawn in front.

Older games did not have a ghost piece, but all games that conform to the Tetris Guideline allow the player to use a ghost piece at all times, and Dr. Mario for Nintendo 64 has a ghost piece as well. The ghost piece reduces the number of misdrops, especially for beginners or for high-speed players who use hard drop, but some players who are migrating from games without a ghost piece have trouble adjusting to the ghost piece when they fail to distinguish it from blocks in the playfield.

See also

Topics