It says a lot for SpaceChem then that, on explaining it’s principles further and showcasing a quick puzzle, they watch intently for five minutes, chime in with their own puzzle-solving suggestions for half an hour, and then wander away – no doubt musing about buying it at some point soon. Like this one that the GIF doesn’t capture the full loop, but you can guess that we’ll build another hex-salt on the left side with an exceeding water marbles.It says something about my family that when they ask what I’ve been playing lately, I can respond with “I’ve been playing a game involving chemical engineering” and (unlike my family – Ed.) they will wait for further details before writing it off as dry, dull and boring. Thus enable a new way to play by optimizing code length instead! That is we have to think in term of loop with the excess unprocessed marbles lying around. Since the bonus puzzle has limit the size of the machine already, there’s no point in reducing the size furthermore. Unluckily, I don’t think this one is the most optimized yet. Luckily, It still relatively easy for me since I encounter puzzles with lots of space constraint before (looking at you, SpaceChem). The difficulty is spiked from normal puzzles with infinite playfield. Maybe there should be a way to rotate the wheel in only one direction?īut what’s excite me more is the second kind of bonus puzzle where the machine’s size does matter. Though I can make this the fastest and having a nice looking, but I think the back-and-forth rotation is kinda wrong. The first kind of bonus puzzle, which are not that hard, but it just don’t fit in the story (well… this game has a good love story). Yes, I design it with the fastest way to optimize in mind. Yuck, it kinda ugly, but its also lands me on the top 1% leaderboard.ĭone with the main game and not yet satisfy? Go grab one of my puzzle over Steam’s workshop. Then move the product back to bond with the newly created part. But I suspect that trying to make this kind of puzzle go faster would destroy the aesthetic of the machine, so I gave up optimizing more.Īnd by optimizing the infinity puzzle, I hack this one to go faster by moving the finished product to the output section asap. This one is not the fastest possible on the leaderboard. It’s a monstrous monster making water-snack with million hands then eats. I feel like this one looks like the black magician somehow. However this one require distinct elements in detail (the element of life and dead). Like the butterfly one that I can mirror mini-machines. But the pinnacle of this solution is that it was the cheapest design with the maximum throughput on reddit’s community leaderboard (standing for half a day then beaten by another player □). It… kinda ugly compare to my other solutions. Five marbles are required but two marbles are given at a time. Which I find that making two unidentical mini-machines result in the fastest overall machine.Īnother one with the odd/even product/input. This time it ask for four marbles product, while giving three input marbles. So why don’t have two separate mini-machines that use only one input each? It looks like a terrible optimizing idea to make one product at a time using both input. I have a lot of joy arranging this one into the shape of a butterfly! Well… I mean the product require to be three marbles, but we only have two input marbles. The throughput is at maximum since we have to convert lead into tin first, thus pulling two air and two quicksilver per loop and then ship the product in just the next two cycles. This one ask us to combine the air element with metals, specifically quicksilver and tin. Which is done by (re)applying quicksilver (☿) again and again to turn lead (♄) into tin (♃) into iron (♂) into copper (♀) into silver (☾) and finally into gold (☉). The first puzzle (apart from the tutorial) ask us to turn metals into gold. ⚠️ Lots of large images and spoilers ⚠️ Refined Gold I’ve put some of my speedy-yet-satisfy-to-watch solutions here in the hope that it might lure you to fall in love with this game. Unlike MOLEK-SYNTEZ (that focus on nowadays organic chemistry), this game consider the four basic western elements: earth (□), wind (□), fire (□), and water (□) alongside with metals and the neutral salt (□) to create any compound of our need. Opus Magnum is a game about alchemistry, which is a cryptic academic discipline in the renaissance era.
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