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| title | tags | date | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hundred Rabbits Ecosystem |
|
9-08-23 |
Hundred Rabbits has a collection of programs and APIs that reflect the kind of project base I really like. Here are the highlights.
About
Hundred Rabbits is actually just two people, Rek and Devine, and they're just so cool. They both have Mastodon accounts that you can follow them on, found here. Devine's about programming (though they also do some art and have previously released music), and Rek is a writer. They sail around the world on a craft named Pino. Follow their RSS for monthly travel updates!
Tools
Uxn
Uxn is the primary crown jewel of the 100R ecosystem. It's an extremely lightweight operating system designed to run on absolutely anything (kind of a necessity when your equipment is constantly surrounded by seawater). So many little useful programs and a few games exist for this system. My favorites:
- Noodle: Remember Flipnote studio? This is almost like that for stills. Super simple and cute!
- Orca: esolang. In another life, I loved these things.
- Nasu: 8-bit sprite editor
- Left: Fully featured text editor for making Uxn programs.
- Adelie: Presentations
The Rest
- (old) Ecosystem Theme: a theme framework for your apps. Aeriform TAPE, mentioned in the productivity#On your computer, uses this system, and you can clone this repo for some free themes for it. Tape is actually how I discovered 100R!
Games
- Oquonie: textless isometric Uxn game about moving through rooms that defy physics. Very bizarre, and reminds me of Yume Nikki. Really good.
- Paradise: more of a sandbox with a set of rules than a game. Create named things, assign them behaviors with an in-universe scripting language, and create things inside them. Create spells to automate your actions. You can tell your own stories inside Paradise.
- I use mine as a sort of trophy room of my favorite memories, imagined as physical items in a display cabinet with flavor text attached.
- The base version is slightly broken. Most performant version I've found is Mobandon's fork, which also adds dialogue.
[!hint] I'm looking for a more performant version of Paradise than Mobandon's, with a working version of the original LISP-based embedded scripting language. If you find one, comment!