### New features - ***Architect mode*** Usually the cave is randomized by the game, meaning that each attempt will produce a different dungeon. However, with this new feature the player can, between runs, opt into keeping the same cave. If activated, they will then encounter the same floor layouts, same enemy spawns, and same red chest contents as on their previous attempt. - ***Custom item pool*** Previously, the multiworld item pool consisted entirely of random blue chest items because, well, the permanent checks are blue chests and that's what one would normally get from these. While blue chest items often greatly increase your odds against regular enemies, being able to defeat the Master can be contingent on having an appropriate equipment setup of red chest items (such as Dekar blade) or even enemy drops (such as Hidora rock), most of which cannot normally be obtained from blue chests. With the custom item pool option, players now have the freedom to place any cave item into the multiworld itempool for their world. - ***Enemy floor number, enemy sprite, and enemy movement pattern randomization*** Experienced players can deduce a lot of information about the opposition they will be facing, for example: Given the current floor number, one can know in advance which of the enemy types will have a chance to spawn on that floor. And when seeing a particular enemy sprite, one can already know which enemy types one might have to face in battle if one were to come in contact with it, and also how that enemy group will move through the dungeon. Three new randomization options are added for players who want to spice up their game: one can shuffle which enemy types appear on which floor, one can shuffle which sprite is used by which enemy type, and one can shuffle which movement pattern is used by which sprite. - ***EXP modifier*** Just a simple multiplier option to allow people to level up faster. (For technical reasons, the maximum amount of EXP that can be awarded for a single enemy is limited to 65535, but even with the maximum allowed modifier of 500% there are only 6 enemy types in the cave that can reach this cap.) ### Balance change - ***proportionally adjust chest type distribution to accommodate increased blue chest chance*** One of the main problems that became apparent in the current version has to do with the distribution of chest contents. The game considers 6 categories, namely: consumable (mostly non-restorative), consumable (restorative), blue chest item, spell, gear, and weapon. Since only blue chests count as multiworld locations, we want to have a mechanism to customize the blue chest chance. Given how the chest types are detetermined in game, a naive implementation of an increased blue chest chance causes only the consumable chance to be decreased in return. In practice, this has resulted in some players of worlds with a high blue chest chance struggling (more than usual) to keep their party alive because they were always low on comsumables that restore HP and MP. The new algorithm tries to avoid this one-sided effect by having an increase in blue chest chance resulting in a decrease of all other types, calculated in such a way that the relative distribution of the other 5 categories stays (approximately) the same. ### Bug fixes - ***prevent using party member items if character is already in party*** This should have been changed at the same time that 6eb00621e39c930f5746f5f3c69a6bc19cd0e84a was made, but oh well... - ***fix glitched sprite when opening a chest immediately after receiving an item*** When opening a chest right after receiving a multiworld item (such that there were two item get animations in the exact same iteration of the game main loop), the item from the chest would display an incorrect sprite in the wrong place. Fixed by cleaning up some relevant memory addresses after getting the multiworld item. - ***fix death link*** There was a condition in `deathlink_kill_player` that looked kinda smart (it checked the time against `last_death_link`), but actually wasn't smart at all because `deathlink_kill_player` is executed as an async task and the main thread will update `last_death_link` after creating the task, meaning that whether or not the incoming death link would actually be passed to the game seems to have been up to a race condition. Fixed by simply removing that check. ### Other - ***add Lufia II Ancient Cave (and SMW) to the network diagram*** These two games were missing from the SNES sector. - ***implement get_filler_item_name*** Place a restorative consumable instead of a completely random item. (Now the only known problem with item links in lufia2ac is... that noone has ever tested item links. But this should be an improvement at least. Anyway, now #1172 can come ;) And btw., if you think that the implementation of random selection in this method looks weird, that's because it is indeed weird. (It tries to recreate the algorithm that the game itself uses when it generates a replacement item for a chest that would contain a spell that the party already knows.) - ***store all options in a dataclass*** This is basically like using #993 (but without actual support from core). It makes the lufia2ac world code much nicer to maintain because one doesn't have to change 5 different places anymore when adding or renaming an option. - ***remove master_hp.scale*** I have to admit: `scale` was a mistake. Never have I seen a single option value cause so many user misconceptions. Some people assume it affects enemies other than the Master; some people assume it affects stats other than HP; and many people will just assume it is a magic option that will somehow counterbalance whatever settings combination they are currently trying to shoot themselves in the foot with. On top of that, the `scale` mechanism probably doesn't provide a good user experience even when used for its intended purpose (since having reached floor XY in general doesn't mean you will have the power to deplete XY% of the Masters usual HP; especially given that, due to the randomness of loot, you are never guaranteed to be able to defeat the vanilla Master even when you have cleared 100% of the floors). The intended target audience of the `master_hp` option are people who want to fight the Master (and know how to fight it), but also want to lessen (to a degree of their choosing) the harsh dependence on the specific equipment setups that are usually required to win this fight even when having done all 99 floors. They can achieve this by setting the `master_hp` option to a numeric value appropriate for the level of challenge they are seeking. Therefore, nothing of value should be lost by removing the special `scale` value from the `master_hp` option, while at the same time a major source of user confusion will be eliminated. - ***typing*** This (combined with the switch to the option dataclass) greatly reduces the typing problems in the lufia2ac world. The remaining typing errors mostly fall into 4 categories: 1. Lambdas with defaults (which seem to be incorrectly reported as an error due to a mypy bug) 1. Classmethods that return instances (which could probably be improved using PEP 673 "Self" types, but that would require Python 3.11 as the minimum supported version) 1. Everything that inherits from TextChoice (which is a typing mess in core) 1. Everything related to asar.py (which does not have proper typing and lies outside of this project) ## How was this tested? https://discord.com/channels/731205301247803413/1080852357442707476 and others |
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.github | ||
WebHostLib | ||
data | ||
docs | ||
test | ||
typings/kivy | ||
worlds | ||
.gitignore | ||
BaseClasses.py | ||
ChecksFinderClient.py | ||
CommonClient.py | ||
FF1Client.py | ||
FactorioClient.py | ||
Fill.py | ||
Generate.py | ||
LICENSE | ||
Launcher.py | ||
LttPAdjuster.py | ||
Main.py | ||
MinecraftClient.py | ||
ModuleUpdate.py | ||
MultiServer.py | ||
NetUtils.py | ||
OoTAdjuster.py | ||
OoTClient.py | ||
Options.py | ||
Patch.py | ||
PokemonClient.py | ||
README.md | ||
SNIClient.py | ||
Starcraft2Client.py | ||
Utils.py | ||
WargrooveClient.py | ||
WebHost.py | ||
Zelda1Client.py | ||
ZillionClient.py | ||
host.yaml | ||
inno_setup.iss | ||
kvui.py | ||
meta.yaml | ||
playerSettings.yaml | ||
pytest.ini | ||
requirements.txt | ||
setup.py |
README.md
Archipelago
| Install
Archipelago provides a generic framework for developing multiworld capability for game randomizers. In all cases, presently, Archipelago is also the randomizer itself.
Currently, the following games are supported:
- The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past
- Factorio
- Minecraft
- Subnautica
- Slay the Spire
- Risk of Rain 2
- The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time
- Timespinner
- Super Metroid
- Secret of Evermore
- Final Fantasy
- Rogue Legacy
- VVVVVV
- Raft
- Super Mario 64
- Meritous
- Super Metroid/Link to the Past combo randomizer (SMZ3)
- ChecksFinder
- ArchipIDLE
- Hollow Knight
- The Witness
- Sonic Adventure 2: Battle
- Starcraft 2: Wings of Liberty
- Donkey Kong Country 3
- Dark Souls 3
- Super Mario World
- Pokémon Red and Blue
- Hylics 2
- Overcooked! 2
- Zillion
- Lufia II Ancient Cave
- Blasphemous
- Wargroove
- Stardew Valley
- The Legend of Zelda
- The Messenger
For setup and instructions check out our tutorials page. Downloads can be found at Releases, including compiled windows binaries.
History
Archipelago is built upon a strong legacy of brilliant hobbyists. We want to honor that legacy by showing it here. The repositories which Archipelago is built upon, inspired by, or otherwise owes its gratitude to are:
- bonta0's MultiWorld
- AmazingAmpharos' Entrance Randomizer
- VT Web Randomizer
- Dessyreqt's alttprandomizer
- Zarby89's and sosuke3's contributions to Enemizer, which make the vast majority of Enemizer contributions.
We recognize that there is a strong community of incredibly smart people that have come before us and helped pave the path. Just because one person's name may be in a repository title does not mean that only one person made that project happen. We can't hope to perfectly cover every single contribution that lead up to Archipelago but we hope to honor them fairly.
Path to the Archipelago
Archipelago was directly forked from bonta0's multiworld_31
branch of ALttPEntranceRandomizer (this project has a long legacy of its own, please check it out linked above) on January 12, 2020. The repository was then named to MultiWorld-Utilities to better encompass its intended function. As Archipelago matured, then known as "Berserker's MultiWorld" by some, we found it necessary to transform our repository into a root level repository (as opposed to a 'forked repo') and change the name (which came later) to better reflect our project.
Running Archipelago
For most people all you need to do is head over to the releases page then download and run the appropriate installer. The installers function on Windows only.
If you are running Archipelago from a non-Windows system then the likely scenario is that you are comfortable running source code directly. Please see our doc on running Archipelago from source.
Related Repositories
This project makes use of multiple other projects. We wouldn't be here without these other repositories and the contributions of their developers, past and present.
Contributing
For contribution guidelines, please see our Contributing doc.
FAQ
For Frequently asked questions, please see the website's FAQ Page.
Code of Conduct
Please refer to our code of conduct.