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Covered under a BSD-style license; see the file LICENSE for the full text.
Bubble Escape is a video game for the Commodore 64 computer.
You, a sentient soap bubble, have been arrested for your political beliefs by the ruling class of your society, an ancient race of dragons. You find yourself imprisoned in a maze-like dungeon from which you must escape. There is but a single exit, and it will require five different keys to open. You will find these keys randomly deposited throughout the dungeon, but each room presents its own hazards: moving walls, fireballs, hovering sentry robots, and dragon officials. Being a soap bubble, you must be very careful to avoid touching any of these hazards, and the dungeon walls as well, otherwise you will pop. Fortunately, bubbles, like cats, have nine lives.
To start the game, mount the "bubble escape 2k.d64" disk image and type
load"*",8
run
Plug your joystick into port 2. Pushing in any direction will accelerate the bubble in that direction. The fire button is not used except to start a new game after you've lost all 9 lives.
If you are playing this game in the VICE emulator, make sure you have sound playback enabled, as the random number generator relies on it.
This is all you need to know to begin playing the game, but some extra hints/spoilers are given at the bottom of this readme.
If you're not interested in how this game came to be, you can skip these two sections.
I wrote the original version of this game in the 1980's, when I was a teenager. It was written in BASIC, and was thus very slow. I tried to make it seem faster by calling the movement subroutine twice in quick succession inside the main game loop, but that only made it choppier.
This was one of my earliest games, and one of the few that actually got finished -- although it fell a bit short of the original vision, which included having the dragon elders shoot fireballs at you, and something more exciting happening in the rooms with three fireballs in them.
The idea was doubtless influenced by StarQuake -- a large, multi-screen, non-scrolling maze (with a couple of teleporters) in which you must locate and collect a number of crucial items and deposit them in a certain place.
The sprites were designed by hand on graph paper, manually translated into decimal numbers and transcribed into DATA statements. There were some errors in this process, and the bubble and the dragon didn't look quite right.
The BASIC source code of the original is included for historical and comparative purposes, or if you prefer, for larfs.
The remake was written entirely in 6502 assembly language, using the P65 portable 6502 assembler. (The P65 assembler has since been superceded by the Ophis assembler, which is now used in the build process -- in fact, Ophis version 2.0 is assumed.) The memories of my disappointment at the poor performance of the original game had hung heavily on my mind (well, maybe not that heavily,) hence I endeavoured to make the remake as fast and as smooth as I could.
This was largely accomplished by the use of a raster interrupt which is triggered at the very bottom of the screen. This interrupt runs a routine which updates the positions of all the sprites. It then calculates what the next positions should be, based on velocity and acceleration of the sprites, the direction the joystick is being pressed, the "AI" of the bad guys, etc.
The remake is more or less faithful to the original. The maze is the same and the hazards are essentially the same. The degree to which the game is still unfinished is the same; the dragon elders still do not shoot fireballs, and the three-fireball rooms are still just three fireballs.
But some changes are significant:
- Full screen. The original used only the leftmost 256 pixel positions to avoid messy multi-byte POKEs. The remake uses the entire screen. For this reason, the display is slightly different as well: lives are shown in the upper left corner, keys are shown in the upper right. The walls are also thinner.
- Sentry robots move with acceleration. In the remake, I initially tried to duplicate the constant-velocity motion in the original, but I found it more straightforward to apply the same physics to the sentries as to the bubble, and once I got this to work, I liked it and kept it.
- The sprites were fixed up a bit. They look less wrong now.
- The title screen, game over screen, and game won screens are not nearly as nice to look at.
The assembly code for this version was pretty painful because it was largely a direct translation of the BASIC to assembly language. I can think of many ways for it to be much cleaner (more jump tables come to mind.)
Since my remake was a mere ~3K in size, and since I had not too long after- wards discovered the Mini Game Compo (via The New Dimension's website), I thought it would be fun to enter Bubble Escape into it.
Then I had to decide -- should I enter it as a 4K game (I'd probably have to add more features,) or should I try to squeeze it down into 2K? Well, given the nature of the contest and my history of space optimization (see Shelta!), the choice was easy.
I optimized away a lot of the bulky logic and debugging-assistance code, and got it down to around ~2300 bytes. After that I started chipping away at the game itself, getting rid of the title/game over screens, sound effects, and one sprite image, bringing it down to ~2175 bytes.
I then looked for a cruncher that would take me the rest of the way. After a few false starts, I eventually found "Cruncher AB+" which exceeded my expectations. In fact, I was able to restore the sound effects and sprite, and add one more feature to make the game harder (the more keys you have, the shorter the delay before a sentry starts moving after you enter its room.)
The end result was 2043 bytes, so I christened it "Bubble Escape 2K" and here you have it.
Much to my surprise, submitting Bubble Escape 2K to the 2009 Mini Game Competition was a good move -- it won first place in the 2K category!
Unfortunately, the website hosting the rules and entries went down soon afterwards, and I did not think fast enough about saving a copy of the results page for posterity, so I have no hard evidence of this. I'm sure if you could find and ask the judges, they'd back up my story, though :)
After writing the remake, I had a great, and I think perfectly reasonable, desire to play it on a real, physical Commodore 64. Through a series of moves, I lost my original C64 in 2009; acquiring another one was not too difficult, but the burning question was, what was the best way to get that 2K of code onto the new machine?
There are several ways, ranging in ease and expense, to transfer files from modern PC's to C64's and back. I decided that the most interesting, though, was to get an EPROM burner, a bit of Flash memory in a DIP, and an old Commodore 64 cartridge that no one really wanted; and to modify the game to run from a cartridge ROM, burn that ROM image onto the Flash chip, take apart the cartridge, remove the existing ROM, wire the Flash chip up to the right address and data lines on the cartridge's PCB, stick it into the cartridge port and turn on the C64.
Well, some of those things transpired, and some didn't -- I did sacrifice a "Frog Master" cartridge for the project, but I never did get to the point of removing the ROM from its PCB. (There's an outside chance I will someday, but I wouldn't bank on it. Ha! Ha! "Bank", get it?)
I did, however, modify the game to build as an 8K ROM image in 2011, and, after fixing some bugs in 2012, it does boot as a fully playable ROM image in VICE.
Being an 8K ROM image based on a ~2K game, there is a lot of room there that is currently just zero bytes, but which could be used for all kinds of enhancements: maybe a title screen with music, maybe better game over and game won sequences, maybe random maze generation, maybe nastier nasties. Maybe someday.
All three versions of Bubble Escape are now covered under a BSD-style license, which means you can deal quite freely with the source code and compiled binaries as long as you keep the license text intact. See the file LICENSE for complete information.
The full title of the game is "Cat's Eye Technologies' Bubble Escape", to distinguish it from the handful of other games of the same name (many of which are online Flash-based dealies) which have appeared since the original was written.
- The maze is 20 rooms wide by 10 rooms tall, 200 rooms in total.
- The maze is static and hardcoded, not randomly generated.
- You start in the top left corner.
- The exit is in the bottom right corner.
- There are teleporters in the bottom left and top right corners; each one will teleport you to the other corner.
Have fun!
Chris Pressey
July 7, 2009
Bellevue, WA