A Runner Up's Guide To Running The Rink by springsteen0991
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TERROR MOUNTAIN - I was running out of article ideas when this one hit me like
a block of ice. And ta-dah, here it is: to make a guide to everyone's favorite
ice skating game, Rink Runner! But half way through making the outline of this
article, I realized I sort of wasn't an expert at the game, under any circumstances,
and, in fact should not be the one to make a guide for the game. Oh, but I liked
the idea so much I just had to write this guide, which is by no means an expert's
guide to the game, it's just a beginner's. Then I decided to call it
a "Runner Up's" guide... It just seemed more appropriate since you are running
the rink after all.
Introduction
Rink Runner is a game played in Happy Valley. To get there, you can go to
the Happy Valley map and click on the rink where the Bruce skating, you can
go to the Games Room in the Action section, or you can simply click here. It's
a flash game, meaning you'll need a flash player, but it's really quite simple
and easy once you play it a few times. There are just a few minor rules to follow,
and this article has them all, and not much more. So, if you feel that you need
to work on your moves before this year's Annual Happy Valley Skating Competition,
which I'm not totally sure exists, use this guide to help you learn how to skate
almost as good as an amateur!
The Basics
All the action of the game takes place on the wondrous not too solid rink!
You play a cute little Bruce on ice skates, and you skate about the ice rink
trying to catch musical notes. How do you do it? You simply click to where you
want the Bruce to skate to, and he will automatically go there! Every note you
come across on your way is acquired instantly! Depending on how many notes you
catch, the all-mighty Judges decide whether you will move on to the next level
or not. Oh, and it's a really good idea to not catch the sharps (#) and the
flats! (b) Now here's some almost useless knowledge on the Information Bar.
The Information Bar
The Information Bar is located at the bottom of the screen. To the left of
it, you have the three Judges and their scores. Look there at the end of the
level to find out what they gave you. Then, on the right, you have three white
boxes all with numbers in them. The first box has the number of notes you've
caught during your current level. The second has the number of notes caught
throughout the entire game. (It's tallied up at the end of each level.) The
final box tells you your best game score. However, this is only your best game
score since you've had the game window open. (I guess they had to put something
in that box.) But it's still a pretty handy thing to have right there comfortably
sitting at the bottom of your screen, eh?
The Notes
The notes are the key part to winning, them being the object of what you need
to catch, and all. Thirty of them show up on each level. They appear from the
sides of the rink, and bounce all over. All you need to do is click your mouse
to a place where you'll come in contact with one. For example, if a ring is
here all you need to do is skate a little bit further down from there,
because notes tend to get away if you click right on them. Making sense so far?
Probably not. Don't worry, it gets more confusing. The notes change color. At
first they are black, then green, then blue, then orange,
then red. When they feel like they've been red long enough, they disappear.
And guess what? When they disappear, you can't catch them anymore. Tough luck.
And here's some even worse luck, there are evil and bad notes that tend to lurk
around the rink. These are known as sharps, which look like this: #, and flats,
which look like this: b. I mentioned them earlier, but what I did not mention
was their supreme peril. If you catch one, you lose two notes! That's right,
two notes will not appear, and you will never be able to catch and regain them
ever. Luckily, they change colors and disappear, too. So just try your best
to avoid them! The Judges apparently don't like it too much when you catch them.
The Judges
Ha! You're probably thinking: "Whoa, he knows a lot about this game, he's
really an expert." Well, up there, that was just information about the notes
that everyone knows already. Don't be afraid that I really know exactly what
I'm talking about. Rest assure that that at least is not true. With that said,
it's time to learn about the Judges role in all this. The Judges decide whether
you move on to the next level or not. To please the Judges, you need to catch
as many notes as you can. But there is more to it! You also need to not make
too many jumps to get the notes. If you're zigzagging all over the rink and
not catching any notes, chances are the Judges will bring you down a few points.
Points, I say? Indeed. Each Judge can score you from a zero to a ten, and there
are three Judges in all. To advance to the next level, you need to get at least
the required sum of the Judges points... That wasn't very understandable, was
it? What you need to do to advance to the next level is to get the added scores
of the Judges to be at least (insert number here, for example, 21). So, if you
needed a score of 21 by the end of the level, and each Judge gave you seven
points out of ten, then you'd pass! Gee, I'm a mathematician.
The Levels
Finally, I'm giving you info on this "Level" business. I'll start this paragraph
off with a big surprise: you start the game on level one! Level one is very
easy. In fact, it is impossible to not get through level one. Even if you don't
catch a single note, you will be passed on to level two. But it's easy to catch
all of the notes on level one, because the rink is made of solid ice, and they
are the color black when they appear, giving you loads of time to run into them.
Well, it gets a little more complicated in level two. To beat level two, you
need at least a judges score of 21, not zero like in the first level. And that's
not the big complication. The notes don't start out being black anymore, no.
They're already green when they show up! That leaves you less time to catch
them. And that's not the big complication either. The big complication is that
the ice opens up and cracks a little, leaving you a few dainty little water
holes! Fall into one of those, and you're disqualified. That's an automatic
game over.
"Well then, how much worse can it get?" You ask. Plenty worse. In level three
ice melts away leaving two thin intersecting ice pathways across the rink, and
four ice islands cut off from the pathway by water. You can skate across the
water, somehow, but if you click to a place where there is no ice, you will
go there. And guess what? You'll fall in. So, only go for a note if it is definitely
on ice, not water. Be patient, and as I said, don't zigzag all over the place.
Level Four... Yes, I told you, this is only a Runner UP's guide. I've
only gotten to level four twice, and here's what happens. The intersecting ice
path ways disappear, leaving you only the four ice islands bobbing around in
the water. Also, the notes are already blue when they appear. That means that
they're blue, then they're orange, and then they turn red already! That leaves
you a limited time to catch them, and they bounce around faster and appear more
frequently. I've beaten this level only once, but I'll give you some advice
anyway. Here it is: Only go for the notes when they're on one of the islands.
Sounds easy, huh? Well, not exactly. It's easy for your mouse to slip or for
you to mess up and skate into the water. Also, the islands, as I said, bob around
in the water a bit. This means that they move. So beware!
So I guess now you are really thinking that the levels can not get much harder...
Well, it's true, they can't! I noticed no difference between level four and
five when I moved up, except that the bobbing ice islands bobbed some more.
To beat this level, just follow my tips from level four, and you probably won't
beat it, since I followed those tips and fell in the ice. Can't seem to beat
level four? Practice makes perfect, or average, in my case.
That was the guide, everyone. Don't you just feel like going out and tearing
up the ice now? I know I do. This article even taught me a few things
about Rink Running, and I wrote it! So as you glide across the rink in search
of your next musical notation symbol, remember the rules, tips, and hints I
gave you and you'll be a mediocre Rink Runner like me in no time!
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