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The original Lode Runner was endearing because it was so simple-left, right, up, down, blaster, holes. In this version, the player has to use direction-specific bombs to open walls, hide in little 'invisible' cubes, avoid monks with different agendas. Lode runner free download - Lode Runner 2, Lode Runner PGS II, Lode Runner Retro, and many more programs. Enter to Search. Can you get overwatch for mac 2018. My Profile Logout. CNET News Best Apps Popular Apps. Lode Runner: The Legend Returns is an enjoyable, if somewhat repetitive game. You play as the Lode Runner himself, Jake Peril. Lode Runner was created by the legendary Doug E. Lode Runner Online: The Mad Monks' Revenge (sequel to Lode Runner: The Legend Returns, both developed by Presage Software) was released by Sierra for Windows and Mac in 1995.

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Lode Runner... Do you remember that classic game by Broderbund? The idea is simple: you control the hero who avoids the guards and collects all the treasure to move on to the next level. The hero cannot kill guards, but can dig holes in the brick floors to temporarily trap the guards.

Key Features:

  • Provide 45 breathtaking levels
  • Each of them with its own zest and strategy
  • Offer unique AI making guards act naturally
  • The main character will never get jammed or stuck
  • Support auto save and continue
  • Support ranking
  • Game sound/mute setting
  • Classic graphics design.

Gameplay:
The player controls a stick figure who must collect all the gold in a level while avoiding guards who try to catch the player. After collecting all the gold, the player must travel to the top of the screen to reach the next level. There are 150 levels in the game which progressively challenge players' problem-solving abilities or reaction times.

Levels feature a multi-story, brick platform motif, with ladders and suspended hand-to-hand bars that offer multiple ways to travel throughout. The player can dig holes into floors to temporarily trap guards and may safely walk atop trapped guards. Over time, floors dug into will regenerate, filling in these holes. A trapped guard who cannot escape a hole before it fills is consumed, immediately respawning in a random location at the top of the level. Floors may also contain trapdoors, through which the player and guards will fall, and bedrock, through which the player cannot dig.

Notably, the player can only dig a hole to the sides, and not directly underneath himself. This poses an important strategy: when digging through a wall that's N blocks high, the player must first dig a gap that's at least N wide to be able to dig through it, as the number of spaces will shrink with one each layer, and the player needs at least one free adjacent space to be able to dig.

The player starts with five lives; each level completion awards an extra life. Should a guard catch the player, one life is lost and the current level restarts. The player's character can fall from arbitrary heights without injury but cannot jump, and players can trap themselves in pits from which the only escape is to abort the level, costing a life, and begin again.

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Lode Runner 2

Developer: Presage
Publishers: GT Interactive (PC), MacSoft (Mac)
Platforms: Windows, Mac OS Classic
Released internationally: September 30, 1998 (PC), 1998 (Mac)

This game has unused areas.
This game has unused graphics.
This game has unused text.

Lode Runner 2 is an isometric incarnation of Lode Runner, with a host of neat powerups and puzzles, and online multiplayer capability.

  • 2Unused Graphics
  • 3Unused Debug Text

Scrapped Worlds

By editing the byte of a custom level that tells LR2 which world the level uses and then trying to open it, you can determine this:
00 Mona
01 Wacky (although it may crash LR2 under some conditions)
02 Industry
03 Alien
04 Jungle
05 Builder
06 Gear
07 Mall
08 World Hub
09 Credit Level

There is no Alien World, nor a Mall World, and as such the editor will tell you that it couldn't find their graphics .PRX files. Presage must have intended to include them until some point in development...

(Source: Stephen Appleby)

Unused Graphics

None of the graphics appear to be stored with names, so in some cases there is really no clue as to what they are.

Colorful Keys

These appear in 4 of the .PRX files: Gbg, Glrs, Gog, and UI. Some of them within the same file appear to be duplicates, and they appear all in sequence as shown here (each row is from a different file, in alphabetical order). Some or all of them have way larger palettes than they actually use. As it turns out, that's because these placeholder images are where the alternative palettes for monks, lode runners, bombs, and some UI elements related to runner colours, are stored! Why these 'key' images themselves look like they do (or indeed why they have image data instead of only having palettes, since we know they don't have to), is still unclear.

Transforming Monk

A monk turning into a pillar for some reason. Maybe this was part of a scrapped mechanic? Appears in Gbg.PRX, which is where the Monk stuff all seems to be.

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Detail Settings

These are in UI.PRX, but there is no menu that shows them. At least, if there is, it's disabled.

Hidden Gubbins

The configure controls menu normally has some buttons placed in the bottom right area, obscuring these intricate machine bits. Only this menu has such bits; the other menus have a relatively simple textured appearance, aside from the borders.

Team LR2

Appears in UI.PRX.The image was first discovered, and then all (probably) of the cheat strings were located. It turns out that typing 'teamlr2' (sans quotes) at the very first menu, and then starting a new game, will cause this image to take the place of the usual rotation of instructive images.

Smileyface Monk Portrait

Appears in UI.PRX. The main menu has portraits for Jake Peril and Jane, the titular Lode Runners (the Lode Runner 2, if you will). However, there are not two sets of sprites, but three! First 3 small ones, then 3 normal, 3 bright, 3 monochrone, and 3 partially desaturated. The first of each is Jake, the second is Jane, and the third... is a Mad Monk with a big yellow smiley face. There is nowhere on the menu to select this option. Perhaps it's another undiscovered secret...Much later in the file there are tiny portraits for the in-game HUD. He's in there too.

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World Icon Placeholders

In Editor.PRX, there are sprites which are used in the level editor to represent each world. They appear in the same order as in the world bytes in a level file (first Mona, then Wacky, etc.), except that there is an extra one between Builder and Gear. For that extra one, Alien, Mall, World Hub, and Credit (none of which are options in the editor), the icon is this thing.

0x0 sprites

In Editor.PRX, there are sprites which are used by the level editor to represent any prefabricated arrangements of multiple tiles which are available for the currently chosen world. For Wacky world, the file lists 30. 3 of them are defined as taking up 0 bytes. They are shown here in order of appearance.

(Source: Toastline)

Unused Debug Text

In LR2.exe

Some strings are repeated, but this list will not feature the duplicates. Some of the particular instances of strings in the file may not be used, but the text appears in-game in other places, and so those will also not feature on this list because it's not known whether those particular instances are used or not.

In LR2Ed.exe

Many of the strings that ARE used in LR2.exe appear here as well, but are not used due to reasons like being related to online multiplayer modes, which the editor does not have.

Lode

Unique Demo Graphics

Where the Team LR2 image normally resides in the full game, the demo has this. Why is there all that empty space around it? The set of instructive menu graphics to which this belongs are all like that, for some reason, in the demo and in the full game. The game runs in 640x480 fullscreen mode, and storing these images this way means that they don't need an offset for the visible part to appear where it's supposed to. That doesn't seem like it saves any time or space, since they have to store the blank space in each image instead of one pair of values that applies to all of them, but that's how it is.

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The Lode Runner series
Apple IILode Runner
SNESPower Lode Runner‎
Nintendo 64Lode Runner 3-D‎
Game Boy AdvanceHudson Best Collection Vol. 2: Lode Runner Collection
Windows/Mac OS ClassicLode Runner 2

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