this was really fun to watch, thanks for playing! quick tip, you actually can sideflip - its just very manual. click one direction to get Mario running, then get him to turn around by right clicking and set jump behind him where you want him to sideflip. or you can click behind him so he starts turning around then right click his feet and set jump
Thanks for watching! I don't keep up with the Mario 64 rom hacking scene that much, but this was definitely one of the coolest hack concepts I think I've ever played. Very good stuff! Also I figured that was probably how you could do it, though considering how I was struggling with the controls already I would've spent hours trying to do one sideflip lol. Great job on the hack!
@@MelloMuffen awesome thanks!! I'm glad you like it. we have a version 1.0 coming out pretty soon that'll have all new challenges and some secrets but the base movement and whatnot is locked down at this point. but yeah, sideflips are rough lmao. the whole game feels like you're playing it as a child again because the most basic stuff requires so much thought. it was a bit of a happy accident that it ended up being something as fun as it is, I was a bit worried it'd just be painful
@@thecozies You're absolutely right about that feeling like playing it for the first time again. I'll for sure have to check out that new version when it releases, sounds fun!
My guess on the long jump is since it's a macro (basically doing a set of inputs, in this case Z+A) there are cases where it won't work correctly. On the spinning wheel platforms I think it's starting a jump (from the A press) when the platform is moving down, causing Mario to be in the air when the Z press is inputted. So it instead does a ground pound. Normally you have to first press Z and then A after, and while most of the time pressing both simultaneously is fine, in this case it messes it up
this was really fun to watch, thanks for playing! quick tip, you actually can sideflip - its just very manual. click one direction to get Mario running, then get him to turn around by right clicking and set jump behind him where you want him to sideflip. or you can click behind him so he starts turning around then right click his feet and set jump
Thanks for watching! I don't keep up with the Mario 64 rom hacking scene that much, but this was definitely one of the coolest hack concepts I think I've ever played. Very good stuff! Also I figured that was probably how you could do it, though considering how I was struggling with the controls already I would've spent hours trying to do one sideflip lol. Great job on the hack!
@@MelloMuffen awesome thanks!! I'm glad you like it. we have a version 1.0 coming out pretty soon that'll have all new challenges and some secrets but the base movement and whatnot is locked down at this point. but yeah, sideflips are rough lmao. the whole game feels like you're playing it as a child again because the most basic stuff requires so much thought. it was a bit of a happy accident that it ended up being something as fun as it is, I was a bit worried it'd just be painful
@@thecozies You're absolutely right about that feeling like playing it for the first time again. I'll for sure have to check out that new version when it releases, sounds fun!
My guess on the long jump is since it's a macro (basically doing a set of inputs, in this case Z+A) there are cases where it won't work correctly. On the spinning wheel platforms I think it's starting a jump (from the A press) when the platform is moving down, causing Mario to be in the air when the Z press is inputted. So it instead does a ground pound. Normally you have to first press Z and then A after, and while most of the time pressing both simultaneously is fine, in this case it messes it up
you're pretty close! long jumps require a certain amount of speed to trigger, so those misfires are just Mario not going fast enough
so glad i got to see this live, tommy finally wins🙏🙏🙏
You did manage to distract me and make me walk off a ledge multiple times, this is like a quarter of a win at least