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Manic Miner in the Lost Levels: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox homebrew
{{Infobox DS Homebrews
| title       = Manic Miner in the Lost Levels
|title=Manic Miner: The Lost Levels
| image       = [[]]
|image=Manicminerll2.png
| type       = Platform
|description=Remake of the game platform Manic Miner (ZX Spectrum, 1983).
| version     = 1.06
|author=Flash
| licence    = Mixed
|lastupdated=2010/02/27
| author      = Flash
|type=Platform
| website     = http://headsoft.com.au/index.php?category=mmll
|version=1.06
| download    = Media:
|license=Mixed
| source      =
|download=https://dlhb.gamebrew.org/dshomebrew2/manicminerll.7z?k33p0fil35 EFS & FAT
|website=http://headsoft.com.au/index.php?category=mmll
}}
}}
 
Manic Miner: The Lost Levels is a DS port of classic platformer Matthew Smith's Manic Miner series. It features a total of 50 stages, arranged in three sections. The Lost Levels portion includes 20 levels that were added (or modified) for the Manic Miner versions released on Oric, BBC Micro, Dragon 32, Amstrad CPC and GBA.
The tale of Miner Willy and his incredible adventures in the mines, and then the mansions, of Surbiton is legend. But like all legends, it doesn't tell the whole story.
 
Most people know Willy simply as a potholer who got lucky and lived happily ever after in decadent luxury. Far fewer know the secret - suppressed for quarter of a century by the government - of how he also saved Planet Earth from alien invasion.
 
It wasn't until an eccentric but dedicated historian writing a paper for a renowned academic journal (Retro Gamer issue 63) pieced together the complete saga of Willy's heroic exploits from fragments of scattered evidence - in the form of obscure retellings of the 'Manic Miner' folk fable in ancient languages readable only via long-obsolete machines - that the whole truth was finally revealed.


==Features==
==Features==
*50 levels, arranged in three sections
* 50 levels, arranged in three sections:
THE LOST LEVELS
** [https://www.gamebrew.org/wiki/Manic_Miner_in_the_Lost_Levels#The_Lost_Levels The Lost Levels].
WILLYWOOD
** [https://www.gamebrew.org/wiki/Manic_Miner_in_the_Lost_Levels#Willywood Willywood].
BONUS STAGES
** [https://www.gamebrew.org/wiki/Manic_Miner_in_the_Lost_Levels#Bonus_Stages Bonus Stages].


==Installation==
==Installation==
#Copy the .NDS file to the root of your memory card. It's recommended to launch the game directly from the card's normal menu, rather than through secondary interfaces like Moonshell.
Copy the .nds file to the root of your memory card.  
#The game will run on most cards, but if there are problems, always try the card's latest firmware prior to posting a problem on the forum. For example, with the DSTT you'll need at least firmware 1.17a07.


The latest DS card firmwares can be found [http://www.linfoxdomain.com/nintendo/ds/ here]
It's recommended to launch the game directly from the card's normal menu, rather than through secondary interfaces like Moonshell.  


==Gameplay==
==User guide==
The tale of Miner Willy and his incredible adventures in the mines, and then the mansions, of Surbiton is legend. But like all legends, it doesn't tell the whole story.


Collect all the flashing objects to open the door and escape each stage. Beware enemies, conveyor belts, sharp objects, crumbling floors and long falls. Flip switches to alter various aspects of the stage.
Most people know Willy simply as a digger who got lucky and lived happily ever after in decadent luxury. Far fewer know the secret - suppressed for quarter of a century by the government - of how he also saved Planet Earth from alien invasion.


The save system works by saving game data either when a new level is found or when a level is unlocked, and also on the game returning to the title screen, so do not turn your DS off during these times.
It wasn't until an eccentric but dedicated historian writing a paper for a renowned academic journal (Retro Gamer issue 63) pieced together the complete saga of Willy's heroic exploits from fragments of scattered evidence - in the form of obscure retellings of the 'Manic Miner' folk fable in ancient languages readable only via long-obsolete machines - that the whole truth was finally revealed.


==Controls==
Welcome to Manic Miner - The Lost Levels!
D-pad left - move Willy left


D-pad right - move Willy right
===Gameplay===
Collect all the flashing objects to open the door and escape each stage. Beware enemies, conveyor belts, sharp objects, crumbling floors and long falls. Flip switches to alter various aspects of the stage.


A button - make Willy jump
===The Lost Levels===
The Lost Levels are 20 stages taken from genuine Manic Miner ports. They're levels which didn't appear in the original ZX Spectrum version of the game, but were added to subsequent official ports for such platforms as the Oric, BBC Micro, Dragon 32, Amstrad CPC and Game Boy Advance, sometimes as additions to existing levels and sometimes as replacements.


B button - make Willy jump
20 of these stages* were first compiled and ordered into a notional sequel by Stuart Campbell (in 2004, on his website World Of Stuart), which eventually became the subject of a feature in Retro Gamer magazine in 2009 before being turned into the reality you're now reading about.


Start button - pause
The Retro Gamer feature included a Game Boy Advance level (Mummy Daddy) in place of an Oric one (The End Of The World) in order to enhance the feature's visual appeal in the magazine, but the Oric level has been restored in MM:TLL to retain the original vision of the game (Mummy Daddy still appears in MM:TLL in the form of a bonus stage - see below).


R button - speed up text scrolling (during title)
(*There are in fact in total 68 completely original levels in official Manic Miner ports, over and above the 20 of the Spectrum version.)


L button - slow down text scrolling (during title); swap top and bottom screens (during gameplay)
===Willywood===
Unlocked on completion of The Lost Levels, Willywood is a standalone 10-level game featuring original stages designed by the authors of this game.


==Changelog==
===Bonus Stages===
'''v1.00'''
The 20 bonus stages are a mixture of original levels and classic levels from both Manic Miner and other related games. They're played for speed rather than points (each keeps a record of your fastest time), and are unlocked one at a time, by finding secret areas in stages of The Lost Levels and Willywood.


First release - 27 October 2009
If a level has a secret area to find, a small seal will appear at the top right corner of the descriptive scroll which occupies the DS' second screen. On finding the area (you'll know when you've done it) a new bonus level will be unlocked. You don't have to complete the level after finding the secret area, just getting there is enough.
'''v1.01'''
Notes


Minor bug fix, 'seal' display added to title
===Notes===
'''v1.02'''
The save system works by saving game data either when a new level is found or when a level is unlocked, and also on the game returning to the title screen, so do not turn your DS off during these times.


Fix to seal display, graphic changed in Game Over sequence.
==Controls==
'''v1.03'''
Left/Right - Move Willy left/right


Fix to crumbler behaviour, small fixes to "I Had A Hunch" and "Metropolis Bingo", music moved to external file system.
A/B - Make Willy jump
'''v1.04'''


Fix to minor title screen corruption when all modes are unlocked.
Start - Pause
'''v1.05'''


Tune added, Score modification for WillyWood, Small tweaks.
R - Speed up text scrolling (during title)
'''v1.06'''


Fix to Save bug.
L - Slow down text scrolling (during title), swap top and bottom screens (during gameplay)


==Credits==
==Screenshots==
ASM Coding - Flash
https://dlhb.gamebrew.org/dshomebrew/manicminerll2.png
https://dlhb.gamebrew.org/dshomebrew/manicminerll3.png


Coding Support - Headkaze
https://dlhb.gamebrew.org/dshomebrew/manicminerll4.png
https://dlhb.gamebrew.org/dshomebrew/manicminerll5.png


Graphics - Lobo
==Media==
'''Manic Miner the Lost Levels DS Beta''' ([https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W7kCE01dmBo RetroBytesPortal]) <br>
<youtube width="515">W7kCE01dmBo</youtube>
<!--BEGIN Online Emulator Section-->
==Online emulator==
{{EmulatorJS Main
|width=515px
|height=384px
|EJS_backgroundImage=https://www.gamebrew.org/images/0/0c/Manicminerll2.png
|EJS_core=desmume2015
|EJS_gameName=Manic Miner: The Lost Levels
|EJS_gameUrl=https://dlhb.gamebrew.org/onlineemulators/nds/manicminerll.7z
}}
{{DS Control Settings}}
<!--END Online Emulator Section-->
==Compatibility==
The game runs well under emulation, developers recommended:
* No$gba - Offers a good compromise between speed, compatibility, and audio, though you will need the NDS BIOS ROMs.
* NOZ - Enables bigger display sizes (set GBA Mode in options to Poppy Bright will cure the washed out palette).
* DeSmuME - Another decent emulator, and which doesn't require the BIOS ROMs. At the time of writing it has a minor display issue, but creating and then loading a save state seems to fix the problem.
* iDeaS - Also run the game under emulation without requiring the ROMs, though audio will be compromised.


Music - Space Fractal
'''Note:''' The emulators will not automatically save your progress, due to unavoidable technical issues with DS emulation. However all three offer Save States which will do the same job, just create a save state from the File menu whenever you're about to quit your play session.


Concept, Research & Story - Rev.Stu
==Changelog==
'''v1.06'''
* Fix to Save bug.
'''v1.05'''
* Tune added, Score modification for WillyWood, Small tweaks.
'''v1.04'''
* Fix to minor title screen corruption when all modes are unlocked.
'''v1.03'''
* Fix to crumbler behaviour, small fixes to "I Had A Hunch" and "Metropolis Bingo", music moved to external file system.
'''v1.02'''
* Fix to seal display, graphic changed in Game Over sequence.
'''v1.01'''
* Minor bug fix, 'seal' display added to title.
'''v1.00'''
* First release - 27 October 2009.


libXM7 Audio System - Sverx
==Credits==
Miner Willy Softography:
* 1983 - Manic Miner (ZX Spectrum)
* 1984 - Jet Set Willy (ZX Spectrum)
* 1984 - The Perils Of Willy (VIC-20)
* 1985 - Jet Set Willy 2 (ZX Spectrum)
* Miner Willy was created by Matthew Smith, to whom we send love.


Wintermute for devkitARM, Chishm for libfat, Martin Koth for DSTek & No$GBA, Eris & Noda for EFS / NitroFS. Also thanks go to LiraNuna, Blasty, Cearn, Dovoto, Joat, Dekutree, Elhobbs, Ruben, SimonB, DarkCloud and everyone on gbadev.org.
DS version:
* ASM Coding - [http://www.retrobytesportal.co.uk Flash].
* Coding Support - [http://www.headsoft.com.au Headkaze].
* Graphics - [http://www.infectuous.com Lobo].
* Music - [http://www.spacefractal.com Space Fractal].
* Concept, Research & Story - [http://worldofstuart.excellentcontent.com Rev.Stu].
* libXM7 Audio System - [http://wcms.teleion.it/users/cgq/nds/libxm7 Sverx].


Thanks to:
* Wintermute for devkitARM, Chishm for libfat, Martin Koth for DSTek & No$gba, Eris & Noda for EFS/NitroFS. Also thanks go to LiraNuna, Blasty, Cearn, Dovoto, Joat, Dekutree, Elhobbs, Ruben, SimonB, DarkCloud and everyone on gbadev.org.


[[Category:Homebrew applications]]
==External links==
* Official website - [https://web.archive.org/web/20150227022116/http://headsoft.com.au/index.php?category=mmll http://headsoft.com.au/index.php?category=mmll] (archived)

Latest revision as of 05:35, 16 August 2024

Manic Miner: The Lost Levels
Manicminerll2.png
General
AuthorFlash
TypePlatform
Version1.06
LicenseMixed
Last Updated2010/02/27
Links
EFS & FAT Download
Website

Manic Miner: The Lost Levels is a DS port of classic platformer Matthew Smith's Manic Miner series. It features a total of 50 stages, arranged in three sections. The Lost Levels portion includes 20 levels that were added (or modified) for the Manic Miner versions released on Oric, BBC Micro, Dragon 32, Amstrad CPC and GBA.

Features

Installation

Copy the .nds file to the root of your memory card.

It's recommended to launch the game directly from the card's normal menu, rather than through secondary interfaces like Moonshell.

User guide

The tale of Miner Willy and his incredible adventures in the mines, and then the mansions, of Surbiton is legend. But like all legends, it doesn't tell the whole story.

Most people know Willy simply as a digger who got lucky and lived happily ever after in decadent luxury. Far fewer know the secret - suppressed for quarter of a century by the government - of how he also saved Planet Earth from alien invasion.

It wasn't until an eccentric but dedicated historian writing a paper for a renowned academic journal (Retro Gamer issue 63) pieced together the complete saga of Willy's heroic exploits from fragments of scattered evidence - in the form of obscure retellings of the 'Manic Miner' folk fable in ancient languages readable only via long-obsolete machines - that the whole truth was finally revealed.

Welcome to Manic Miner - The Lost Levels!

Gameplay

Collect all the flashing objects to open the door and escape each stage. Beware enemies, conveyor belts, sharp objects, crumbling floors and long falls. Flip switches to alter various aspects of the stage.

The Lost Levels

The Lost Levels are 20 stages taken from genuine Manic Miner ports. They're levels which didn't appear in the original ZX Spectrum version of the game, but were added to subsequent official ports for such platforms as the Oric, BBC Micro, Dragon 32, Amstrad CPC and Game Boy Advance, sometimes as additions to existing levels and sometimes as replacements.

20 of these stages* were first compiled and ordered into a notional sequel by Stuart Campbell (in 2004, on his website World Of Stuart), which eventually became the subject of a feature in Retro Gamer magazine in 2009 before being turned into the reality you're now reading about.

The Retro Gamer feature included a Game Boy Advance level (Mummy Daddy) in place of an Oric one (The End Of The World) in order to enhance the feature's visual appeal in the magazine, but the Oric level has been restored in MM:TLL to retain the original vision of the game (Mummy Daddy still appears in MM:TLL in the form of a bonus stage - see below).

(*There are in fact in total 68 completely original levels in official Manic Miner ports, over and above the 20 of the Spectrum version.)

Willywood

Unlocked on completion of The Lost Levels, Willywood is a standalone 10-level game featuring original stages designed by the authors of this game.

Bonus Stages

The 20 bonus stages are a mixture of original levels and classic levels from both Manic Miner and other related games. They're played for speed rather than points (each keeps a record of your fastest time), and are unlocked one at a time, by finding secret areas in stages of The Lost Levels and Willywood.

If a level has a secret area to find, a small seal will appear at the top right corner of the descriptive scroll which occupies the DS' second screen. On finding the area (you'll know when you've done it) a new bonus level will be unlocked. You don't have to complete the level after finding the secret area, just getting there is enough. Notes

Notes

The save system works by saving game data either when a new level is found or when a level is unlocked, and also on the game returning to the title screen, so do not turn your DS off during these times.

Controls

Left/Right - Move Willy left/right

A/B - Make Willy jump

Start - Pause

R - Speed up text scrolling (during title)

L - Slow down text scrolling (during title), swap top and bottom screens (during gameplay)

Screenshots

manicminerll2.png manicminerll3.png

manicminerll4.png manicminerll5.png

Media

Manic Miner the Lost Levels DS Beta (RetroBytesPortal)

Online emulator

Can use gamepad or customise in the control settings.
Nintendo DS Keyboard
C-a.png Kb-z.png
C-b.png Kb-x.png
C-x.png Kb-a.png
C-y.png Kb-s.png
C-start.png Kb-enter.png
C-select.png Kb-v.png
C-l.png Kb-q.png
C-r.png Kb-e.png
C-pad.png Kb-dpad.png

Compatibility

The game runs well under emulation, developers recommended:

  • No$gba - Offers a good compromise between speed, compatibility, and audio, though you will need the NDS BIOS ROMs.
  • NOZ - Enables bigger display sizes (set GBA Mode in options to Poppy Bright will cure the washed out palette).
  • DeSmuME - Another decent emulator, and which doesn't require the BIOS ROMs. At the time of writing it has a minor display issue, but creating and then loading a save state seems to fix the problem.
  • iDeaS - Also run the game under emulation without requiring the ROMs, though audio will be compromised.

Note: The emulators will not automatically save your progress, due to unavoidable technical issues with DS emulation. However all three offer Save States which will do the same job, just create a save state from the File menu whenever you're about to quit your play session.

Changelog

v1.06

  • Fix to Save bug.

v1.05

  • Tune added, Score modification for WillyWood, Small tweaks.

v1.04

  • Fix to minor title screen corruption when all modes are unlocked.

v1.03

  • Fix to crumbler behaviour, small fixes to "I Had A Hunch" and "Metropolis Bingo", music moved to external file system.

v1.02

  • Fix to seal display, graphic changed in Game Over sequence.

v1.01

  • Minor bug fix, 'seal' display added to title.

v1.00

  • First release - 27 October 2009.

Credits

Miner Willy Softography:

  • 1983 - Manic Miner (ZX Spectrum)
  • 1984 - Jet Set Willy (ZX Spectrum)
  • 1984 - The Perils Of Willy (VIC-20)
  • 1985 - Jet Set Willy 2 (ZX Spectrum)
  • Miner Willy was created by Matthew Smith, to whom we send love.

DS version:

Thanks to:

  • Wintermute for devkitARM, Chishm for libfat, Martin Koth for DSTek & No$gba, Eris & Noda for EFS/NitroFS. Also thanks go to LiraNuna, Blasty, Cearn, Dovoto, Joat, Dekutree, Elhobbs, Ruben, SimonB, DarkCloud and everyone on gbadev.org.

External links

Advertising: