Fish Fillets NG

Fish Fillets NG, originally just Fish Fillets, is a puzzle video game developed and released by Altar Games in 1998. The game's goal is in each level to find a safe way out for both of the two fish. Fish Fillets is comparable to other sliding puzzle games such as sokoban and klotski, while it has a few additional elements and rules.

Fish Fillets - Next Generation
Developer(s)Ivo Danihelka, and others
Initial releaseApril 24, 2004 (2004-04-24)
Stable release
1.0.1 / September 9, 2011 (2011-09-09)
Repository
  • [cvs://anonymous:@fillets.cvs.sourceforge.net/cvsroot/fillets fillets.cvs.sourceforge.net/cvsroot/fillets]
Written inC++, SDL, Lua
Operating systemCross-platform
Size~152 MB (varies by platform)
Available inCzech, English, German, French, Polish, Italian, Dutch, Spanish, Russian, Brazilian Portuguese, Slovenian, Swedish, Bulgarian, Esperanto
TypePuzzle video game
LicenseGNU GPLv2
Websitefillets.sourceforge.net

Gameplay

Starting position of level 3, "Rehearsal in Cellar"

The game involves two fish, both controlled by the player, moving various objects and obstacles around until they may both safely exit the level. Unlike many other sliding puzzle games, this one has gravity, and an unsupported object will fall until it lands on something else. If an object falls onto one of the fish, it dies and the level cannot be completed unless restarted. One of the fish is larger, and only he may lift or push certain objects (steel objects), which adds another level of complication to the puzzles. Another important, complicating rule is that no object may be slid across the back of a fish, as this is considered to be the same as an object landing on a fish's back. However, a fish who is holding up an object may swim back and forth underneath it and an object may be slid exactly one unit off of a fish's back if it is moving onto solid support in the process.[1] The game has background music and, on many levels, some animated effects, though neither normally has an effect on game play.

History

The game was originally created by Czech video game developer Altar Games and released commercially in 1998.[2] In 2002, it was relicensed and released under the GPL on Sourceforge. In 2004 fans created a new version ("Next Generation") based on the open-source release. The fan community ported the game to many other operating systems, created an extra branch of levels, and translated it to many languages.[2]

Reception

Fish Fillets was selected in March 2008 as "HotPick" by Linux Format.[3]

Fish Fillets NG was downloaded between 2004 and May 2017 alone via Sourceforge.net over 180,000 times.[4]

gollark: ++tel setup
gollark: I did those.
gollark: You should have perms for that now also.
gollark: ++tel init_webhook
gollark: Also notable is that apparently floating point inaccuracies in the neural network make the hashes turn out differently on different devices. Yet the cryptographic system doing the matches is only able to do *exact* matches, not hamming distance or something.

References

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