Achieved at : 2021-04-18
Rank : 4
(12% worse)
Lups : 497
Approved :
Yes
Voting completed : 2021-05-08
General Rules: |
Left difficulty switch setting must remain in the A/Expert position throughout gameplay. Right difficulty switch setting may be in any position at any time. No use of trainers, cheats, saved game files, auto-fire (when not default present in-game), emulator save states, or other emulator advantages. No use of code modifications that give the player an advantage over other players. No continues. It is discouraged and may lead to voters not accepting your score to: - excessively point farm - use glitches or other game exploits |
Specific Rules: |
Game 1: The player can curve the ball either up or down after it is thrown. Ball remains travelling in the direction selected until the roll has been completed. Left difficulty switch setting must remain in the position indicated by the leaderboard category: A/Expert: Hard to strike B/Novice: Normal strike capability Right difficulty switch setting has no effect in a one-player variation, and can therefore be in any position at any time. β For Diff A submissions, the evidence must show proof that the player's difficulty switch was in the A/Expert position throughout gameplay. π₯ Maxout: 300 A 4.10.22 |
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TGP
Emulation checked, game checked, Game 1 checked, gameplay checked, score checked.
Voting yes.
Clever way to show the switch settings.
Voting yes.
Clever way to show the switch settings.
RetroRob
It's difficult to show evidence for the Expert/A setting for the Atari Flashback 8 console. It can barely be seen whether the switches (3rd and 4th from left) are pressed in (Novice/B) or released (Expert/A). But there's a good way to show: in the beginning I select the game Video Pinball where the effect of the Expert/A setting can be seen on screen: at the bottom of the table there are 2 gaps making gameplay more difficult (Expert/A). You can see me switching it on Expert/A (gaps at bottom). Then I reset the console to start Bowling game 1.
Good run starts at 4:17'. Thanks for watching.
Good run starts at 4:17'. Thanks for watching.