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The game is very challenging, but unlike many Boulder Dash-related games the difficulty comes from solving the puzzles in each level rather than from semi-responsive controls. Also, it was very easy to skip additional levels by editing the file that contained the list of levels successfully completed. Although the levels must be played in order, the game allows up to three levels to be skipped at any given time. The game comes with 111 levels though many unofficial level sets have been released that greatly increase that number. In early 2020, an open source 1:1 reimplementation of the original game called OpenSupaplex was released.Ī partial screenshot showing a few elements of the game Level editors and a Win32 clone, "Megaplex", were created. The developers of the game have declared the software to be freeware. Extra features have also been added without changing the game itself. Herman Perk disassembled the game, debugged it and re-assembled it again.
#Supaplex online game full version#
(Two people from the London area started developing a full version for the Atari ST, but it was never released, because of the limited graphical support.) Unofficial ports have been made to other platforms, such as the ZX Spectrum.ĭue to hardware dependent programming, the PC version of Supaplex ran twice as fast as PCs became faster. The game was released for Amiga and MS-DOS. In fact, the Amiga version could not be copied onto the hard drive due to copy protection and its custom disk format. The original Amiga Supaplex version had to fit on a standard 880kB floppy disk and it needed to run on a standard 512kB Amiga like the original A500 or A2000. Designed as a version of Boulder Dash that could fit onto a floppy disk, the designers had a hard time developing better graphics under said constraint.