Wall kick: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
*>Nicholas m Reverted edits by 123.120.152.84 (Talk); changed back to last version by DIGITAL |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
A | A '''wall kick''' happens when a player [[rotate]]s a [[piece]] when no space exists in the squares where that tetromino would normally occupy after the rotation. To compensate, the game sets a certain number of alternative spaces for the tetromino to look. Wall kicks started appearing in [[game]]s because after a piece would be backed up against the wall, it would awkwardly be unable to rotate until first moving back. | ||
'''wall kick''' happens when a player [[rotate]]s a [[piece]] when no space exists in the squares where that tetromino would normally occupy after the rotation. To compensate, the game sets a certain number of alternative spaces for the tetromino to look. Wall kicks started appearing in [[game]]s because after a piece would be backed up against the wall, it would awkwardly be unable to rotate until first moving back. | |||
{| | {| | ||
|- valign="top" | |- valign="top" |
Revision as of 14:10, 4 January 2008
A wall kick happens when a player rotates a piece when no space exists in the squares where that tetromino would normally occupy after the rotation. To compensate, the game sets a certain number of alternative spaces for the tetromino to look. Wall kicks started appearing in games because after a piece would be backed up against the wall, it would awkwardly be unable to rotate until first moving back.
Here T can rotate |
Here T cannot rotate without a wall kick |
The simplest wall kick algorithm, used (with variations) by TGM rotation and several fan games in the same tradition, is to try moving the tetromino one space to the right, and then one space to the left, and then fail. Wall kicks increase the number of possible twists.
Other notable rotation systems that include wall kick and/or floor kick include the following:
- The rotation systems of the domino based games Dr. Mario, Puyo Pop, and Super Puzzle Fighter II.
- The rotation system of Tetris DX, which allows wall climbing
- The rotation system of The New Tetris, considered a predecessor to SRS
- SRS, the flexible Super Rotation System used by games that follow the Tetris Guideline
- The rotation system of DTET, a fan game with a complex but unarbitrary wall/floor kick algorithm
Data tables describing systems for a number of Tetris games exist in the source code of several fan games, such as Heboris Unofficial expansion, syoboris or Lockjaw.
External links
- Koryan's analysis of various rotation systems including their wall kicks (Japanese)