Making a game on a custom bytecode VM in 7 days and 3kB

(laurent.le-brun.eu)

39 points | by laurentlb 5 days ago

5 comments

  • NooneAtAll3 10 minutes ago
    Reminds me of https://js13kgames.com/ where people managed to do a whole air sim in 13kb (out of many other things)
  • vegabook 34 minutes ago
    It's incredibly satisfying to see the polar opposite of the usual LLM/superDB/K8/CICD/Cloud/Container/Crapola corpobloat we hear about on this site all the time, namely a tiny piece of handcrafted code, ironically produce something infinitely more aesthetically beautiful, and intellectually interesting from an almost artisan engineering perspective.
  • jstrieb 1 hour ago
    The rest of the games submitted to this very interesting, somewhat niche game jam (including my own entry) are here:

    https://itch.io/jam/langjamgamejam/entries

    There were some really impressive submissions in spite of the short time frame!

    • azhenley 50 minutes ago
      The jam was originally going to be just me doing a solo project but it grew much larger! Over 200 people joined the Discord.

      We plan on running it again: https://langjamgamejam.com/

      • jstrieb 34 minutes ago
        Maybe I missed it, but I didn't notice a submission of yours in the jam. Did you end up getting around to doing your solo project?
  • PaulHoule 2 hours ago
    Such a beautiful technique for shoehorning straight out of the 1970s! See also

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CHIP-8

    and

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SWEET16

    It seems so un-FORTRAN that DEC had a FORTRAN compiler for the PDP-11. that was based on a stack machine and then later built an FP accelerator specialized to accelerate the stack machine. It was a straggler but I'm still trying to track down a circa 1992 article from Dr. Dobb's Journal where someone used virtual machine techniques to unbreak the broken i860 and make a good FORTRAN compiler.

  • nsxwolf 3 hours ago
    What's that overall filter that covers the view? Is it supposed to look like a late 80s passive matrix color LCD screen?

    Edit: Thanks for the downvote, guess I shouldn't have paid any attention to this post at all?