Attributes

  • Forgoes major game breaking glitches
  • Forgoes out of bounds
  • Forgoes memory corruption
  • Aims for lowest real time / frame count
  • Abuses minor glitches and exploits
  • Takes damage to save time
  • Manipulates luck

Terminology

  • Energy Tank = E-Tank
  • Reserve Tank = R-Tank
  • Super Missile = Super
  • Power Bomb = PB
  • X-Ray Scope = X-Ray
  • Speed Booster = Speed
  • Hi-Jump Boots = HJB
  • Charge Beam = Charge
  • Plasma Beam = Plasma
  • Mother Brain = MB
  • Damage Boost = D-Boost
  • Continuous Wall Jump = CWJ
  • Shinespark = Spark
  • RNG = Random Number Generation
  • PLM = Post-Load Modification

Tools Used


Overview

This is an even newer Any% TAS of Super Metroid, involving a vastly different and superior route to save an enormous amount of time over my previous Any% TAS. With a real time of 35:58.3 and in-game time of 20:59:44 (minutes:seconds:frames), I have improved upon that TAS by a whopping 103 real time seconds and 97 in-game time seconds. Even though the in-game time is right on the edge of the next minute, no real time was sacrificed to achieve it.
X-Ray (along with a R-Tank) has been incorporated into this run, which saves around 11 seconds through various wild applications. This is also the first full-game TAS that takes complete advantage of the moonfall technique.
The production of this TAS was lengthy, and multiple times, it would be restarted from some point in the beginning to correct mistakes and/or incorporate new discoveries, such as moonfall. There are many tiny, near-invisible optimizations in the majority of rooms, and some cool, completely new strategies applied throughout.
The main goal of this Any% TAS was to beat the game by applying all of the discoveries from the past several years, barring the usage of out of bounds and memory corruption of course.

Route Outline

Proving itself to be the greatest boss order of all time, and matching the Low% TAS, Kraid -> Ridley -> Draygon -> Phantoon is the boss order of choice here. As a result, most of the beam upgrades were brought back (sorry Spazer), and Gravity Suit was thrown into the ocean.
Yet again, I grab the Brinstar R-Tank as it is required for performing a trick referred to as "God Mode", or G-Mode for short, which is activated to enter Lower Norfair from what is normally its exit, rather than from its elevator. Although the R-Tank can serve as a replacement to one E-Tank for the purpose of surviving MB's rainbow beam, a fourth tank (a third E-Tank) would prove too valuable to attempt skipping, due to the extreme amount of energy consumed throughout the run from sparks.

New Techniques

Moonfall

By moonwalking then pressing jump (frame 1: < or > + X, frame 2: A), instead of performing a jump, Samus will perform a turnaround animation right before performing the jump.
This particular jump will not write a new value to its vertical direction (7E0B36), causing its Y-speed value to underflow, if performed from the normal ground state. Normally, Samus's falling speed is capped at ~5 pixels per frame, but by performing this jump, her speed will be uncapped.
Therefore, by performing a moonfall, it is possible to acquire a large amount of falling speed, which can be used to pass through entire tiles. A standard tile is 16 pixels by 16 pixels.
Additionally, it is also possible to store this speed by pixel-and-frame-perfectly unmorphing onto a surface, whereby this stored speed can be unleashed later by performing the moonfall inputs again. The speed will remain stored so long as Samus does not crouch, uncrouch, jump, fall off of a surface, or get struck by something.

Inverse CWJ Methods

A few new methods were found for performing inverse CWJs, or ICWJs, during the development of this TAS:
  • Freezing an enemy in order to ICWJ from it, and then slaying it immediately after walljumping from it to prevent colliding with it and thus losing speed. Performed using the Mochtroids in Colosseum.
  • Performing an ICWJ and then immediately morphing afterward to prevent a collision. Performed in the "Three Musketeers" room upon entering Lower Norfair through G-Mode - by kicking off of the second mechanical pillar and then morphing afterward, it became possible to barely maneuver over the acid.

X-Mode

Activating X-Ray on the same frame that the knockback timer expires alters some properties of X-Ray, allowing for horizontal movement via arm pumping, and even activating sparks. X-Ray normally resets the spark timer immediately upon activating, but does not do so in this mode.

G-Mode

Discovered by EternisedDragon in 2015. Running out of energy during a door transition does not trigger the R-Tank's "Auto" feature before the next room is fully loaded. When the next room finishes loading, there is one frame of game play before the R-Tank activates.
This frame can be used to activate X-Ray, and although doing so would normally cause the less-useful "R-Mode", found many years ago by Kejardon, G-Mode can be achieved instead if the input used for activating X-Ray is released within a ~3 frame window, while the R-Tank finishes refilling Samus's energy.
This enables control over Samus, but leaves some properties of X-Ray active - for example, the game is unable to execute any PLMs, such as crumble blocks or screen scroll controllers (which is the reason the camera doesn't follow Samus during this mode), meaning activating too many PLMs will cause the queue to fill up and make most of them nonsolid. Thus, through G-Mode, Lower Norfair is easily accessible through what is normally its exit by jumping through the nonsolid pillars and crumble blocks.
The mode is disabled whenever X-Ray is activated again, and since doors are also PLMs, they will not open while the mode is active (excluding the initial door, which stays open when the mode is first activated, allowing the mode to persist into the room you were originally in).

Superjump

Discovered by SUPERMETROIDFTP in 2015 after he found that releasing X-Mode while sparking vertically would result in a crazy amount of speed. The reason for such speed is that during vertical sparks, speed continues building by ~7 pixels per frame for unknown reasons.
Despite the speed increase, the spark does not use the memory address associated with such speed; however, if the spark is interrupted by deactivating X-Ray, that speed becomes Samus's new speed, which can be a value of up to hundreds of pixels per frame depending on how long the spark progressed before X-Ray was deactivated.
Additionally, whenever X-Ray is deactivated while sparking, a blue suit is generated, which proves to be quite useful over the course of the run.
Although superjumps can be used to easily access out of bounds areas, Samus never enters an out of bounds area during this run.
A superjump can be stored if it is released slightly above ground height. Samus will be placed in a standing position on the ground with her vertical speed maintained, which can be unleashed through various different means. This is referred to as a "stored superjump".

Dash Swap

If dash is held while X-Ray is selected in the HUD, it prevents the Charge timer from increasing and even allows for the release of the shot button to maintain the Charge timer's value. As a result, it is possible to morph in midair - while maintaining a beam's charge - without turning around first.
Although a unique detail, it only managed to save one frame within the run - while revisiting Wasteland, a charge was maintained through the tunnel in order to open the vertical door one frame earlier due to the charge shot's larger hitbox.

X-Plasma

Certain foes, such as Phantoon, Botwoon, and Draygon, are unique in that their invulnerability frames will still elapse while X-Ray is active, effectively allowing for one charged Plasma shot to strike them multiple times, similar to the infamous "pause glitch" in Mega Man. Technically not a new technique, but worth mentioning anyway.

Details & Improvements Per Area

Ceres

Immediately, the run begins with a moonfall, which saves 15 frames.
During the escape, the transition between the stair room and the tile room was corrected with a forwards knockback, saving 8 frames.

Sleeping Crateria

~4 seconds total were saved between the Parlor and the Climb by performing moonfalls.

Blue Brinstar

There were no real time improvements to this area compared to my previous runs; however, I did manage to save 1 in-game frame by falling down Construction Zone 1 frame faster, which caused the door to become 1 pixel off-center.

Awakened Crateria

A frame was saved in the room before Bomb Torizo through a new sequencing of the Missiles, and a frame was saved after bombing the wall before the Terminator room by timing the shot better, opening the door a frame earlier.
Acquiring a Missile drop from a Kago bug instead of the first Geemer in the Terminator room saved 4-5 frames.
Optimizing the first d-boost in the Green Pirate Shaft, along with storing and unleashing speed through moonfall, saved ~12 frames.

Green Brinstar

In the elevator room, 10 frames were saved through a slight optimization of the door-opening strategy.
The R-Tank, which is a requirement of G-Mode, is collected at the cost of ~1026 frames.
2 frames were saved by d-boosting into the Super pack instead of jumping into it.
Clipping through the PB floor of the elevator room saves 30-40 seconds due to the assortment of useful items in the rooms below the floor.
In the Dachora room, 10-20 frames were lost by farming 3 drops - to prepare the R-Tank's energy pool accordingly for the upcoming G-Mode - and 3-4 seconds were saved by destroying the center blockade with a PB.
The storage and unleashing of moonfalls throughout Big Pink saved 10-20 frames.

Red Brinstar

A moonfall is used while waiting on the bomb explosion to save a few frames.
X-Ray is collected at a hefty price of ~2960 frames, but will prove to be well worth it over time.
The room strategies of X-Ray and the room before/after are seconds faster in comparison to Cpadolf's (obsoleted) game end glitch TAS.
Cacatacs cause RNG to advance at twice its normal speed, so its death is delayed to manipulate Kraid's drops.

Kraid's Lair

Two of the pirates were farmed at the cost of 10-20 frames, and the d-boost before the Gadora was skipped at the cost of 9 frames, in order to maintain enough energy for the lag reduction performed during Kraid's rising sequence (without getting "health bombed" afterward).

Norfair

HJB are not acquired until after Ridley as it turned out to be faster to delay them than to collect them by falling back down and climbing back up.
A single round of Gamets are farmed after Speed, acquiring 5 Supers at the cost of ~70 frames. The odds of this happening normally are approximately 72 in 10,000.
As explained previously, Lower Norfair is entered from its exit via G-Mode, saving ~2600 frames. During the downtime spent waiting on the Multiviola to make its way near the door, I farm two Supers and a PB.

Lower Norfair

The two Kihunters are taken out with a spark upon entering, reducing lag that would occur through the rest of the room after the acid recedes. Afterwards, a ridiculous ICWJ is performed off the pillar, followed by a soft-unmorph to store fall speed that is unleashed in the next room via moonfall.
A blue suit via X-Mode is produced, saving time in the next few rooms by being able to destroy Kihunters and blocks upon contact. Additionally, moonfalls are stored and unleashed throughout the area, saving 2-4 frames per use, preventing slopes from slowing Samus down.
A new double ball boost strategy was implemented in the room after the steel pirates, saving 50 energy at the cost of ~10 frames.

Ridley

Compared to previous X-Factor-performing TASes, the lag throughout the fight has been greatly reduced, and a new strategy for the first X-Factor is ~20 frames faster. Altogether, the fight is over a second faster than those TASes.

Norfair Escape

Superjumps throughout this area saved a combined amount of ~392 frames.
The dash swap technique is executed while leaving Wasteland, saving the aforementioned frame.
Believe it or not, bombing the pillars outside of Lower Norfair is faster for real time than using a PB.
40-50 frames were saved by d-boosting off the Multiviola after the tunnel mockball.
The items around the HJB area are collected with a speedball similar to the one performed in Cpadolf's Any%.

Maridia

Just like in my previous Any% TAS, Maridia is entered through the green gate by freezing the Zebbo beneath it and mockballing into it, forcing it to open and keeping the glass tube intact.
A X-Mode spark allows Samus to fly through the sand hall, and the blue suit gained from that allows Samus to superjump through the gray door that normally prevents access to Plasma until Draygon has been defeated. Unfortunately, this causes the graphics to become misaligned for the remainder of the run.
After grabbing Plasma, another blue suit is created via X-Mode, with a moonfall performed after onto the center of the door below as it is opening, fixing the transition, and yet another moonfall right after in the next room.
Another X-Mode spark is performed, this time to skip the gray door that normally prevents access to Draygon until Botwoon has been defeated, in a much quicker manner than otherwise.
In Cacatac Alley, the blue suit gained from the above is transformed into a spark suit. Then, at the end of the Colosseum, this spark suit is transformed back into a blue suit. This is because X-Ray is used to defeat Draygon, and activating X-Ray normally would erase a spark suit - but not a blue suit.

Draygon

So long as she is moving, blue suit keeps Samus safe from turret shots.
Thanks to our totally-legitimately-acquired Plasma, X-Plasma is used to fry Draygon in mere seconds.

Maridia Escape

Upon revisiting Cacatac Alley, a spark suit is obtained in an extremely small distance by abusing X-Mode, and then X-Mode is used again to horizontally spark through a chunk of the room.
A stored superjump is performed in the Butterfly room, and unleashed in the next room, causing Samus to rise through the wall, up into the door above without even having to open it.
In the Thread The Needle room, an X-Mode spark is performed through the first half of the room, and the second half of the room is farmed to regain energy for a spark in Crateria later.
The spark from the blue suit gained through the X-Mode spark is used to superjump directly up the elevator shaft, skipping the intended elevator ride and saving ~10 seconds. There was only 1 frame remaining on the spark timer at the time of activation.
Two perfectly overlapped Kago bugs were able to be farmed without slowing down.

Wrecked Ship

Previous energy preparation caused the spark to end at the optimal location next to the door.
The moonfalls throughout the main shaft and room before Phantoon saved a total of 20-30 frames.

Phantoon

Just like Draygon, Phantoon is satisfyingly annihilated with a single charge shot - after striking it with a Missile - saving ~90 frames. The Missile is required to have Phantoon initiate movement, as otherwise, Phantoon would immediately disappear upon contact with the charge shot.

To Tourian

Due to the previous energy and ammo acquisitions, I was able to skip most of Phantoon's drops, performing the traditional speedball exit.
Superjumping up the main shaft saved ~3 seconds.
The leftover blue suit allowed for sparking earlier through the hallway and over the ocean, ending at the ideal location as a result of previous energy preparation, saving over a second compared to the bounce ball strategy that was performed in my Low% run.
Slopekiller is activated upon unmorphing after leaping over the moat, which was either equally fast or 1 frame faster.
Once again, moonfalls are stored and unleashed throughout Green Pirate Shaft, allowing the pirates to be farmed while also saving 4 frames.
Finally, the dance performed along the water in front of the statues is actually Samus building speed through moonfall (although at worse acceleration due to liquid physics), causing her to reach the elevator platform 13 frames faster than before.

Tourian

Strategies similar to those of Saturn's RBO were used to dispatch the Metroids, tweaked slightly for real time.
By using moonfall to clip into part of the dome on the ground, I was able to gain more speed before the first jump of the Super Metroid skip, making it 1 frame swifter than Cpadolf's 100%.
The moonfall down the shaft outside of MB's chamber saved ~13 frames.

MB1

I was able to gain a spark suit during the collapse of MB's tank, only taking 1 point of damage (from the spark). This was accomplished by d-boosting towards MB, which causes Samus to constantly gain knockback frames, and that portion of MB does not deal damage. However, no new knockback pose is given to Samus because the knockback timer never reaches zero.
Upon building enough speed, I crouch to charge a spark, and then gain the spark suit by using the knockback frames from MB appropriately.

MB2

Outside of one frame that occurred during her redbeam, this phase is entirely without lag.
The spark suit is activated right before rainbow beam connects, which causes Samus to override the post-rainbow stun, effectively acting as a three-tank standup glitch.

MB3

Precise bomb jumps and walljumps are performed while the Super Metroid is sapping MB, manipulating her head position to be as left as possible, causing her to sit down as soon as possible.
This phase is entirely without lag, resulting in over a second saved compared to Cpadolf's 100%.

Zebes Escape

Lag throughout the area is lower than in previous TASes. For example, Cpadolf's 100% experiences 16 lag frames in the fourth room, while this run only experiences 10.
Just like my previous TASes, 170 energy allows for the spark in the Climb to end at optimal height.
The slightly delayed mockball on the hill allowed Samus to gain and maintain invulnerability frames through the initial steams in the Landing Site without further delay.

Known & Potential Improvements

Green Brinstar

  • 2 frames can be saved in the Etecoons' room by performing a strange manipulation of the sound queue.

Red Brinstar

  • 2 frames can be saved in the room after X-Ray through a more efficient means of collecting the drops during the Waver d-boost.

Norfair

  • Perfect drop RNG appearing as soon as possible for the Gamet farm after Speed would have saved 8-10 frames.

Ridley

  • Drops could have been slightly better by having more Supers in place of some small energy / PB drops.

Norfair Escape

  • The Fireflea superjump can be improved by ~30 frames by performing a normal superjump instead of a stored superjump to reach the top of the room, which I overlooked at the time.

Tourian

  • Perfect drop RNG would have allowed for skipping the last Metroid's drops in the first Metroid room, saving 15-20 frames.

MB

  • MB2 could theoretically be 17-18 frames faster if perfect RNG would occur to avoid the redbeam and align her timer perfectly. (see Saturn's RBO)

Zebes Escape

  • Perfect steam RNG would save ~5 frames.

Additional

  • Further lag reduction will always be possible, whether it be on Ridley or during some PB explosions. However, such lag reduction can depend on any number of factors, such as performing arbitrary inputs at the time of lag, or what sort of random elements are present at the time.

Special Thanks

  • EternisedDragon a.k.a. Aran;Jaeger for discovering and documenting most of the glitches involving X-Ray and their applications, and for frequently reviewing my progress.
  • Taco, Dan, and Total for creating and modifying various useful lsnes scripts.
  • The previous Super Metroid TASers for providing material with which to compare against and influencing strategies.
  • Overfiend for improving the appearance of this submission.
  • The rest of the Super Metroid speedrunning community.

Noxxa: Judging.
Noxxa: This movie is an excellent masterpiece among Super Metroid TASes. The new tricks and techniques push the game to the limit and almost put it to its breaking point, although this run retains its goals of using no major game-breaking glitches or out-of-bounds tricks, so that it does not outright skip very significant parts of the game. The result is a spectacle to watch throughout, even when the graphics break near the end of the run. Samus' movement is trickier yet sleeker than ever, intended sequences are broken more than ever, and the routing is crazier than any of its predecessors. Ammo and health management are top-notch too, and are pushed to the limit repeatedly. Technical optimization is on point all throughout the movie.
Regarding categorization: as this movie is defined by having no major skips or usage of out-of-bounds glitches, this movie shall not be affected by published Arbitrary Code Execution or previously published X-Ray Out-of-Bounds glitch movies, and instead shall obsolete the currently published any% run. Alongside that, it shall also obsolete the currently published Reverse Boss Order movie.
While RBO was a significant novelty back when the category and TASes of it were first introduced, its significance has been reduced thanks to various new tricks that have been discovered since the latest RBO TAS (dating to 2012) and have been applied in movies such as this. In particular, this run features a highly unusual boss route of its own, with Ridley done before Draygon and Draygon done before Phantoon. In essence, three out of four bosses are already done in reverse order, meaning RBO's novelty is largely reduced to leaving Kraid for last and backtracking to him later in the run. Many of the currently published RBO run's famous gimmicks, like suitless Maridia, are now also featured in this movie, and while it still does have some unique features including the suitless health management in Lower Norfair, it does not do enough unique things to distinguish itself as its own unique category anymore - hence, I'm making the decision of having this movie obsolete it.
Note that this does not mean any sort of reverse boss order is no longer publishable, but it does mean that a new movie of that category has to prove itself again as providing sufficient amounts of new and different material, per Alternative requirements. Currently it does not look like a new movie following the same rules as the currently published RBO TAS, but using the same tricks as this movie, would provide a sufficiently different movie to be worth a separate publication again - but this situation might change in the future, or the category itself might diversify itself enough with different rules potentially involving Mother Brain or sub-bosses, but no definite judgment can be made on this unless or until such a movie were to be made.
Going back to the judgment of this particular movie: viewer response to this movie has been highly positive, even compared to previous Super Metroid movies, and has also been favorable compared to the presently starred Reverse Boss Order publication - therefore, my judgment is that this movie should inherit its star.
As such, accepting to Stars, and to obsolete any% and RBO.
Spikestuff: Publishing.


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While x-ray made it glitchy, it saved only 15-20 seconds in the end. KRDP bosso rder is the main timesave over previous tas, then moonfall, then x-ray (in that order).
Memory
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Sniq wrote:
While x-ray made it glitchy, it saved only 15-20 seconds in the end. KRDP bosso rder is the main timesave over previous tas, then moonfall, then x-ray (in that order).
As much as I wish that people would judge glitches by their actual time save, people will judge them purely by aesthetics for better or worse.
[16:36:31] <Mothrayas> I have to say this argument about robot drug usage is a lot more fun than whatever else we have been doing in the past two+ hours
[16:08:10] <BenLubar> a TAS is just the limit of a segmented speedrun as the segment length approaches zero
Hoandjzj
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Sniq wrote:
I made the graphics visible on the second youtube video, with a simple hack, which didn't affect the sync of tas. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9LHHLzmIKHk
Ah yes, my bad, there are 2 videos and I've just watched the 1st one :) I'd love your knowledge of this game! My vote for a TAS of the year (but it's too soon, maybe you will submit a shorter run o.O!')
Memory
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Honestly most of these glitches aren't that much worse than Murder Beam from back when the game was IGT oriented.
[16:36:31] <Mothrayas> I have to say this argument about robot drug usage is a lot more fun than whatever else we have been doing in the past two+ hours
[16:08:10] <BenLubar> a TAS is just the limit of a segmented speedrun as the segment length approaches zero
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Memory wrote:
You gain some and you lose some when changes like this happen to a game's TAS. A bunch of older players are definitely less pleased with this run, but at the same time you will also gain new fans. I wasn't as enthralled with previous Super Metroid TASes as some people, but I absolutely adored this one. It's a tradeoff.
Care to explain why this tradeoff is necessary and how it contributes to the nature of the category? Superjumps fill the screen with garbage and allow going through platforms—which feels counterproductive in a game with platforming as rich and entertaining as in Super Metroid. Using X-Ray to stop time is a realtime trick known since about forever—it actually made the boss fights far less technically impressive than they were previously. What is a "Super Metroid any%" as a category to you?
Memory wrote:
Honestly most of these glitches aren't that much worse than Murder Beam from back when the game was IGT oriented.
Murder Beam hasn't been in the category on this site for over 13 years—and the reason it went away was precisely because the audience found it too unappealing.
Warp wrote:
Edit: I think I understand now: It's my avatar, isn't it? It makes me look angry.
Memory
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moozooh wrote:
Care to explain why this tradeoff is necessary and how it contributes to the nature of the category?
Sure.
Superjumps fill the screen with garbage and allow going through platforms—which feels counterproductive in a game with platforming as rich and entertaining as in Super Metroid.
I found myself not all that entertained by the platforming of previous Super Metroid TASes. It's good but it's not that good. Meanwhile these "superjumps" allow for crazy fast movement speeds unseen previously. Additionally it fulfills what was practically a dream of mine to shinespark up elevators.
Using X-Ray to stop time is a realtime trick known since about forever—it actually made the boss fights far less technically impressive than they were previously.
I don't really agree (honestly no worse than the old Mega Man 1 trick) but I understand.
What is a "Super Metroid any%" as a category to you?
In my opinion it's whatever people make of it. I love creativity above all else and this is a very creative run. I don't have an opinion on the "spirit" of the category because it feels very restricting.
Murder Beam hasn't been in the category on this site for over 13 years—and the reason it went away was precisely because the audience found it too unappealing.
I would have figured it would have gone away because it was slow, not because of entertainment but ok.
[16:36:31] <Mothrayas> I have to say this argument about robot drug usage is a lot more fun than whatever else we have been doing in the past two+ hours
[16:08:10] <BenLubar> a TAS is just the limit of a segmented speedrun as the segment length approaches zero
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Memory wrote:
I found myself not all that entertained by the platforming of previous Super Metroid TASes. It's good but it's not that good. Meanwhile these "superjumps" allow for crazy fast movement speeds unseen previously.
I don't intend to force unreasonable expectations on you, but it's really a shame that you don't appreciate the smorgasbord of smaller improvements that are, at times (perhaps most of the time), far more creative than the big things that are easy for everyone to notice. One of my personal favorites is the inverse CWJ into a morphball float during the early LN break-in. Most people wouldn't even notice it without pausing, let alone think of it themselves if they were TASing it, and it doesn't make the run per se, but it's one of the things that give it a reason to exist in my book. Damage boost ledge grabs are also amazing, and are also something that takes a lot of experience to notice.
Memory wrote:
I would have figured it would have gone away because it was slow, not because of entertainment but ok.
Terimakasih made a new version of his penultimate run because people complained about the Murder Beam (he said as much in the submission text). That was the impetus, the realtime improvement was a side-effect (indeed, SM was very IGT-oriented at the time).
Warp wrote:
Edit: I think I understand now: It's my avatar, isn't it? It makes me look angry.
Memory
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moozooh wrote:
Memory wrote:
I found myself not all that entertained by the platforming of previous Super Metroid TASes. It's good but it's not that good. Meanwhile these "superjumps" allow for crazy fast movement speeds unseen previously.
I don't intend to force unreasonable expectations on you, but it's really a shame that you don't appreciate the smorgasbord of smaller improvements that are, at times (perhaps most of the time), far more creative than the big things that are easy for everyone to notice. One of my personal favorites is the inverse CWJ into a morphball float during the early LN break-in. Most people wouldn't even notice it without pausing, let alone think of it themselves if they were TASing it, and it doesn't make the run per se, but it's one of the things that give it a reason to exist in my book. Damage boost ledge grabs are also amazing, and are also something that takes a lot of experience to notice.
Again this would require me to really enjoy the previous Super Metroid TASes to begin with. I did enjoy them, but not to the degree which other people did. Because you already loved Super Metroid TASes, these smaller improvements appealed a lot to you. Because I enjoyed them to a much lesser, these smaller improvements did little for me. Entertainment is very subjective.
[16:36:31] <Mothrayas> I have to say this argument about robot drug usage is a lot more fun than whatever else we have been doing in the past two+ hours
[16:08:10] <BenLubar> a TAS is just the limit of a segmented speedrun as the segment length approaches zero
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So I haven't been active on this site for a while due to various IRL crap. But I wanted to come back to say YEEEEESSSSSSS!!! Edit: what I like about this run is as the RTA any% time is being brought down lower and lower I like how much this run sets itself apart from the RTA run. Personally I've always been in the camp of breaking the game as much as possible, but I can understand if others find this run to be too major of a departure from standard any% runs to be enjoyable for some (see: the first Megaman game). Also, dat KRDP
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I personally like both side of the coin. Both the norm and what we're used to and the new rip this game apart to make it faster mentality that sniq had in this run. Now I wanna see this route without the X-Ray and glitching through gray doors. Also no underflow. I would really like to see a run like that which focuses on the normal aspects of the game. As moozooh eluded to it made the platforming in this game so great. Again I like both types and I would like both to get categories but, I don't think that would sit well with most people on this site.
My name is Forensics.
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scrimpeh wrote:
DUDE.
So I watched the run. What have you done to this poor game? How did we go from ammo underflow to this?
Kung_Knut
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Very impressive Mr Sniq. Thanks for making this. I agree with various others that the entertainment was on top up until Maridia. The glitchy graphics from thereon really take away the entertainment because one cannot see what is going on, and one thus will not be amazed by all the precise movement anymore since one cannot see just how precise it is. Watching that other encode, however, yields entertainment all the way throughout the movie. Therefore, your INPUT FILE has my entertaiment YES-vote. If published as any% (which it should be), I recommend having that other encode linked from the publication.
Editor, Player (44)
Joined: 7/11/2010
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I enjoyed this, mostly because this level of glitchiness is what I've come to expect from any%s (in general). Once you know about a game, you can generally move anywhere without gravity, walls, etc. getting in your way. My main concerns were the grey door skips, mostly because they skip out portions of the game that could have been interesting to watch done "properly". Grey doors are used to block off paths which are later used to ease backtracking, so if you go that way, first, there's no original track, the whole run is basically just backwards backtracking. I don't disagree with this being legal in the category, I just think it's something of a pity it's possible.
Active player (378)
Joined: 9/25/2011
Posts: 652
Very fun to watch, absolute yes vote! Now if you would permit a couple SM noob questions: 1) Before Mother Brain used its fancy drain-beam you had over three tanks left to drain. Wouldn't it have been faster to have lower health so it would take less time to drain it down? 2) It seemed you were purposefully hurting yourself to keep the huge metroid on you longer and delay its death sequence. But then you let yourself fill up and had it happen anyway. Is it possible to kill mother brain and still have the huge metroid alive?
Editor, Expert player (2089)
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Posts: 1200
c-square wrote:
Very fun to watch, absolute yes vote! Now if you would permit a couple SM noob questions: 1) Before Mother Brain used its fancy drain-beam you had over three tanks left to drain. Wouldn't it have been faster to have lower health so it would take less time to drain it down? 2) It seemed you were purposefully hurting yourself to keep the huge metroid on you longer and delay its death sequence. But then you let yourself fill up and had it happen anyway. Is it possible to kill mother brain and still have the huge metroid alive?
1) To survive Mother Brain's rainbow beam, bare minimum you need 3 e-tanks and Varia to halve damage. 2) That's the standup glitch. Mother Brain won't actually fall to 0 HP until you shoot her with the beam you get from the baby metroid.
effort on the first draft means less effort on any draft thereafter - some loser
Joined: 8/5/2015
Posts: 29
The "purposeful hurting" is because the Metroid will attempt to routinely delatch from Samus once Samus has reached full energy again, and it's easier to manage the Metroid's position during the sequence if the Metroid isn't trying to do that the entire time, especially because if the Metroid delatches too far to the left, it will make Mother Brain incapable of striking it with rings, since her position during the sequence is somewhat fixed. EDIT: Sniq informed me that he doesn't believe the above - which is an issue some human runners experience during the standup glitch, which is why I brought it up and assumed was the case - would've been an issue even if he wasn't self-damaging, and says that the primary reason for the self-damaging was to prevent lag. Before death, the Metroid is purposefully positioned next to the right wall, so that the length of time it takes to swing back to Mother Brain for its killing blow is minimized. To answer your question, it is possible to reduce Mother Brain's health to zero before the Metroid perishes, but Mother Brain will not herself explode until Hyper Beam has been gained (requiring the Metroid to perish) and so forth.
Active player (378)
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Thanks for the replies. That explains a lot!
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As someone who's been out of the loop for quite a while I found the sheer amount of new improvements and tricks to be pretty staggering. Even knowing about the superjumps, moonfall, shinespark storage, etc, the ways in which everything is implemented goes far beyond what I would have imagined. And the care with which everything has been planned and optimized is also fantastic. moozooh already mentioned the Inverse CWJ into morphball at the LN break-in which was probably my favorite "small" thing that i noted in the run, and I've always gotten a kick out of perfect health management which happens a lot here. I'm kind of with moozooh on categorisation though. Just as a general rule I'd say anything that leaves permanent, distracting graphical glitches is troublesome for a "no major glitches" run, and while the superjumps and x-ray abuses are intriguing a lot is sacrificed in favor of those. Both in terms of comprehensibility (also something that I find at least somewhat important for a no major glitches run) and diversity of play. Zipping through a room get old after a while, and the beauty I find in Super Metroid is that almost every room otherwise contains unique platforming challenges. Likewise, while I'm looking forward to someone hopefully tackling the 100% run with all new tricks and the far greater level of knowledge that the community has, I think some of the more severe tricks would take away a lot of what makes that category interesting. So, massively happy and impressed with the run. Somewhat ambivalent about obsoletion. I have a question about the run though. It might be my faulty memory but I seem to remember testing the x-ray trick with plasma on Phantoon and it not working, basically even if you paused with x-ray he'd go invisible before taking the second hit. Is something special done to get around that or am I just remembering incorrectly? Maybe it's just that you have to hit him with a missile first before hitting him with plasma.
Agare Bagare Kopparslagare
Joined: 8/5/2015
Posts: 29
Cpadolf wrote:
I seem to remember testing the x-ray trick with plasma on Phantoon and it not working, basically even if you paused with x-ray he'd go invisible before taking the second hit. Is something special done to get around that or am I just remembering incorrectly? Maybe it's just that you have to hit him with a missile first before hitting him with plasma.
That's correct. Phantoon has to take damage from some other (weaker) source, thus initiating movement, before the X-Plasma trick can be performed.
jaysmad
Other
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This is getting sick and i love it! Easy yes
Joined: 5/23/2014
Posts: 162
Cpadolf wrote:
As someone who's been out of the loop for quite a while I found the sheer amount of new improvements and tricks to be pretty staggering. Even knowing about the superjumps, moonfall, shinespark storage, etc, the ways in which everything is implemented goes far beyond what I would have imagined. And the care with which everything has been planned and optimized is also fantastic. moozooh already mentioned the Inverse CWJ into morphball at the LN break-in which was probably my favorite "small" thing that i noted in the run, and I've always gotten a kick out of perfect health management which happens a lot here. I'm kind of with moozooh on categorisation though. Just as a general rule I'd say anything that leaves permanent, distracting graphical glitches is troublesome for a "no major glitches" run, and while the superjumps and x-ray abuses are intriguing a lot is sacrificed in favor of those. Both in terms of comprehensibility (also something that I find at least somewhat important for a no major glitches run) and diversity of play. Zipping through a room get old after a while, and the beauty I find in Super Metroid is that almost every room otherwise contains unique platforming challenges. Likewise, while I'm looking forward to someone hopefully tackling the 100% run with all new tricks and the far greater level of knowledge that the community has, I think some of the more severe tricks would take away a lot of what makes that category interesting. So, massively happy and impressed with the run. Somewhat ambivalent about obsoletion.
You're not the only one. As I've said before, I'd be estatic about this as a new category (a more pure Any% whose sole goal is to beat the four bosses then Mother Brain, and finish the escape, use whatever tactics you want to), but for obsoletion, I'm entirely against it.
Editor, Expert player (2089)
Joined: 8/25/2013
Posts: 1200
Yeah no we're not making 'any% with medium glitches' a category. Please remember that the other any% also uses medium glitches, so arbitrarily splitting them like that to preserve a 'pure' movie is flawed from the start.
effort on the first draft means less effort on any draft thereafter - some loser
BigBoct
He/Him
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Joined: 8/9/2007
Posts: 1692
Location: Tiffin/Republic, OH
I think this is good time to talk this out and decide what should and shouldn't be allowed for a hypothetical "any% NMG" run, because based on what I'm seeing in this thread, as well as prior feedback on other submissions, such a run would almost certainly get the votes to be published. The glitch that breaks the game the most in this run is X-Mode Bluesuit; banning that seems to be a good starting point, IMO.
Previous Name: boct1584
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boct1584 wrote:
banning that seems to be a good starting point, IMO.
Or banning you :D
Editor, Expert player (2089)
Joined: 8/25/2013
Posts: 1200
So I'm gonna go ahead and dispel one major gripe before it balloons. Sniq linked this on the discord: https://puu.sh/zsQYU/d846c4d687.mp4 No out of bounds, as you can see.
effort on the first draft means less effort on any draft thereafter - some loser
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