Is a Picross homebrew clone for the Nintendo 3DS console. It's fully programmed in Lua, running under the. For those who don't know what Picross is, it's a series of Sudoku-ish puzzle games in which you have to fill up spaces to discover a hidden picture. It gives you numeric hints for each row and column and you have to figure out which spaces to fill, leaving a gap of at least 1 cell between every 'line' of filled cells.I saw that we were seriously lacking on homebrew puzzle games, so I decided to make one. The goal of the project is to port almost every single puzzle from all mainstream Picross games, like Mario's Picross, Picross 2, Super Mario's Picross, Picross DS and the Picross e series. More info on the GitHub page:Currently, two courses from Mario's Picross are available to play.THE GAME MAY TAKE SOME TIME TO LOAD ANYTHING.
THIS IS NORMAL AND IT'S CAUSED BY THE HUGE.WAV FILES.Screenshots. D-Pad support. Free Mode support. Puzzles of size 20x20 and 25x20. Better controls for big puzzles. Solve a lot of code inconsistencies.
The 'jackpot' thing at the start that clears a random row and column. Let the game tell you when you've completed a row or column succesfully. Done. Support for custom puzzles and courses. More fancy animations.
When Nintendo of America announced they had localized and released Picross 3D: Round 2 a year after its Japanese debut, I was over the moon.The Picross series has been a stable time sink for me ever since I first played Picross DS.However, I was a little dismayed that it wasn’t destined to receive a physical release in the west. This is the third game in the Nintendo DS series. The first one, Picross, was basic, yet fun. The second one, Colourcross, was frustratingly hard. But this, Picross 3D the third one breaks the.
Fix the 'Clear' animation. Improving all graphics. Support for board skins (like in Picross DS) Done. Micross and Mega Picross modes. The Picross DS mini-games. Loading screens (currently it just freezes on the same frame while loading)Progress.
Is available now! Journey through First time 3DS owners, make sure to check out our and/r/3DS Rules:.Keep things civil and on-topic.Threads should be directly related to the 3DS and its accessories. Comments should be on-topic with the thread in which it is posted. All posts should be civil and follow Reddiquette.No basic questions or those covered in the wiki.Questions which can be quickly answered via a Google search or those which have been addressed in the wiki must be directed to the Weekly Question Thread.
This includes game recommendations and tech support topics.Threads must follow content guidelines.No NSFW content, low-effort posts, vague or misleading titles, reposts, image only, or friend code / request posts.No spoilers in post titles.Posts with spoilers in the title will be removed. If your comment contains a spoiler, hide it using: !This is a spoiler.!!Mario saves Peach.! I recently downloaded Pokemon Picross as my first foray into the genre. I like it, really chill and works out the logic muscles of the brain nicely. I'm not a fan of the Pokemon theme (I don't know anyone past gen 2) and the pay to play system isn't my cup of tea. I want to buy one of the picross games available on this eshop, but there's e1-6 and then Mario. Which one is best?
Also I'd like something with easier difficulties because right now I struggle on 15x15 puzzles. Thanks for your advice!EDIT: Went overboard and purchased Mario Picross, Picross E 1-6, and a game on steam Picross related. I think I have a problem. But it all costed less than a new retail game so that's cool.
Pokemon Picross's pay to play isn't as bad when you consider there's a price cap (something like US$30 or $35?) I think the price is worth it for the amount of content it has. Basically, you're buying a game a few payments at a time, and in the meantime you get a very decent demo.I'd check the eShop for the Picross e series, which has six titles available for (I feel) very reasonable prices. The Pokemon Picross title is basically a Pokemon-themed Picross e game.
The series did have features added over time, so I'd recommend playing them in order to avoid the trap of getting used to a feature only to not have it in an earlier title.