Last modified on 13 January 2019, at 05:03

Renegade

Revision as of 05:03, 13 January 2019 by Arnoldemu (Talk | contribs) (Technical)

Renegade is a 1987 game programmed by the same programmer as Gryzor.

Technical

  • Sprites are stored upside down in memory.
  • Sprites are stored as mode 0 with pen 0 as transparent.
  • Sprites are flipped by code in realtime (e.g. the facing right sprite is a flip of the facing left sprite).
  • Sprites are stored in multiple parts and are composed during drawing. Each part has an x,y offset, width and height based on the sprite's coordinates. Therefore heads, bodies and legs are separate. This allows re-use for all characters and enemies.
  • Sprites are stored as follows:

1 byte normal (to write to mode 0 screen), followed by 1 byte with pixels swapped, then this repeats.

It is believed this is done so that drawing a sprite facing left, and drawing a sprite facing right will take the same cpu time and so that the frame rate will remain more constant.

  • Supports 128K RAM. All levels are loaded at once. One 16KB bank per level.
  • 2048 bytes for tile graphics. These are defined per-level. These are copied from &31e0 in 4 parts. There are 128 possible tiles. Runtime ranges: &e600-&e800, &ee00-&f000, &f600-&f800, &fe00-&ffff.
  • Tiles are 4 pixels wide and 8 pixels tall. Each tile's graphics uses 16 bytes. Tiles are stored uncompressed, left-right and top to bottom.
  • Tile map uses 64 bytes. Each byte seems to describe a block of 4 tiles, 4 wide and 1 tall. It's runtime location is at &BF90. This byte is used to lookup into data at 9600 which describes the 4 tile to use.
  • Sprites for all levels are loaded at once and use ~13KB. They are located at &4a80-&7fff in main ram.
  • The game doesn't use hardware scrolling and uses a reduced screen and heavily uses the invisible areas of both screens to store code and data.

Video

{{#ev:youtube|Fc8GDlw2nys|450}}

Links