Marble Marcher: Community Edition
Version 1.4.5
This is the community edition of Marble Marcher, a procedurally rendered fractal physics marble game in which you must get to the flag in each level as fast as you can. With 24 levels to unlock and an active speedrunning community, along with a fully-featured level editor, there's always new features being developed. If you complete all levels, you can use cheats to create and enhance a more exploratory experience.
Because version 1.1.0 was the last feature update of Marble Marcher, we (the Marble Marcher Community) opted to create a community edition to keep the community around the game alive and continuously improve the experience. Currently this is maintained mainly by members of the Marble Marcher Community on Discord, in addition to the members of the subreddit and anyone else who has contributed.
Marble Marcher: Community Edition comes with a wealth of new features and improvements, including performance improvements and graphical enhancements.
If you have suggestions, issues, or would like to contribute, feel free to submit issues and pull requests. After all, this is a community project!
Note: This project requires a mid-range dedicated graphics card (non-integrated) to run in HD (1920x1080) at a good FPS. Anything higher and you'll likely need a higher-range card. However, if no HD isn't an issue, you can lower the resolution or settings to run on something like a laptop or budget computer, in which case the game will run just fine.
itch.io link: https://michaelmoroz.itch.io/mmce
Web port: https://www.shadertoy.com/view/3lKyDR
All credit goes to HackerPoet (aka CodeParade) for the original game.
Original Summary
Marble Marcher is a video game demo that uses a fractal physics engine and fully procedural rendering to produce beautiful and unique gameplay unlike anything you've seen before.
The goal of the game is to reach the flag as quickly as possible. But be careful not to fall off the level or get crushed by the fractal! There are 24 levels to unlock.
Download Link: https://codeparade.itch.io/marblemarcher
Video Explanation: https://youtu.be/9U0XVdvQwAI
Table of Contents
- Changes
- Proposed changes
- System Dependencies
- Building
- Launching
- Special Controls
- Troubleshooting/FAQ
Changes
- Many, many fixes have been applied
- Easier compilation for macOS
- Feasible Windows and Linux compilation
- README.md overhaul
- New rendering engine
- Ingame statistics added (marble speed, ground/air state, ...). Press
o
to toggle. - AntTweakBar editor added. Press
F4
to toggle. - Confirmation, exit buttons in end screens
- Change "controls" menu to "settings" and have audio, controls, sensitivity and fullscreen options there, also allow custom input bindings
- Added controller support (+deadzone)
- Improved text rendering
- Better layout
- Anaglyph/stereoscopic mode
- Screenshot mode (temporarily higher resolution and AA)
- Metal marble skin
- Added auto-exposure, aka adaptive brightness
- Improved bloom
- Improved shadow upscaling
- Added DOF
- Added original shaders as a new configuration
- Added NEON shaders
- Added simple shaders, for those with low-spec machines
- Added experimental PTGI shaders
- Added TXAA
- Added a credits menu
- New pause menu
- New settings menu
- Added a screenshot sound
- Improved screensaver mode
- Added several new levels
- Added custom texture support to compute shaders
- Ability to edit shaders in real-time
- Level Editor and custom level support For more changes, please see the release notes.
Proposed Changes
Though Marble Marcher CE is a largely finished game, there are still several improvements we'd like to implement. Here are our proposed changes:
-
Fixes
- Make sure game runs at the same speed everywhere
- Mouse/camera speed is too fast while skipping cutscenes
-
User Experience Improvements
- Pre-built versions for the common operating systems and make them available as GitHub releases (in progress)
- Make the fractal recoloring from cheats persistent
- More efficient anti-aliasing modes
- Toggle to always activate fast cutscenes
- Better autosplitter integration
-
New Features
- Cheat: no drag
- Custom marble designs
- Add a script to build for all platforms at once
- Have MarbleMarcher added to package managers
-
Currently WIP
- Recording/replay functionality
- Debug info screen
- Cheat: unlock all levels
- Add creation of macOS
.dmg
for easy distribution.
System Dependencies
- Eigen
- SFML 2.5.0
- AntTweakBar
- GLEW
- GLM
- CMake
- OpenAL (in case you get an "OpenAL DLL not found" error while trying to run the software, seems to be Windows-specific)
MacOS
On macOS these can be conveniently installed using HomeBrew:
brew install cmake eigen sfml anttweakbar glew glm
The version of SFML required is 2.5.1 or newer. It has come to my attention that HomeBrew does now have this version (unlike when these instructions where first written) so installing via HomeBrew should work but you can still download manually if you wish and install using these instructions. You must install the Frameworks option not the dylib option or the build script may fail.
Note that if HomeBrew installed a version of SFML older than 2.5.1 for some reason or you wish to install manually, you must remove the version of SFML that Brew installed using brew remove sfml
.
Alternatively, vcpkg can be used though it is unsupported:
vcpkg install cmake eigen3 sfml anttweakbar
It may also be possible to use MacPorts which is also unsupported and untested.
Arch Linux
The packages eigen
, sfml
, glm
, git
, cmake
and make
are on the core, extra and community repositories.
sudo pacman -S eigen sfml glm git cmake make
However, anttweakbar
is on the AUR. Clone and build it yourself, or use and AUR Helper like yay :
yay -S anttweakbar
Building
MacOS
Build Script
Note for the current version: the macOS build is not yet entirely working properly so revert to the previous prerelease as required. SFML is properly included but as of yet, AntTweakBar is not so this executable will not work on machines without it installed.
Simply run ./macOSBuildExec.sh
( You can alternatively use macOSBuildBundle which is the old version of the script, which will generate a full .app file instead of a normal unix executable). This will generate the MarbleMarcher executable that can be used like any other application. It can even be used on systems without SFML as SFML is included in the bundle and the binary is relinked to these versions (As stated above it currently does not work on systems without AntTweakBar installed). Currently the script will only do the relinking part properly if you use SFML 2.5.1 specifically however it is planned to allow for any version. If you have another version, the script will still work, the app just won't work on a machine without SFML.
Manual
Due to macOS being unable to find GLM_INCLUDE_DIR it is now assumed to be ./glm . In order for this method to work, GLM should now be manually installed into that directory.
wget https://github.com/g-truc/glm/releases/download/0.9.9.8/glm-0.9.9.8.zip
unzip ./glm-0.9.9.8.zip
mkdir build && cd build
cmake ..
cmake -DCMAKE_CXX_FLAGS="-I/usr/local/include" ..
- If you use
vcpkg
, add the flag-DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=[path/to/vcpkg]/scripts/buildsystems/vcpkg.cmake
- If you use
cd ..
cmake --build build
Note that this just builds a binary and not an Application bundle like you might be used to seeing. To run properly, you must move the binary (which, after building, is build/MarbleMarcher
). It is not recommended to build the Application bundle manually so no instructions for that are provided however you may peek in macOSBuildBundle.sh
to see how it is done.
Alternatively, one can use the platform-dependent build system, for example Make
:
make -C build
Arch Linux
cd ~
git clone https://github.com/WAUthethird/Marble-Marcher-Community-Edition.git
cd Marble-Marcher-Community-Edition
mkdir build && cd build
cmake ..
cd ..
cmake --build build
cp build/MarbleMarcher ./
Alternatively, you can install the AUR package at marblemarcher-git using your preferred AUR Helper.
yay -S marblemarcher-git
Ubuntu
The main problem with the installation is the dependency AntTweakBar, a C++ library with no Ubuntu package.
But the
first and easy step is to ensure that the following development
tools and
libraries are installed: libsfml-dev
, libglm-dev
, libeigen3-dev
,
libglew-dev
, cmake
, libglu1-mesa-dev
and mesa-common-dev
. You
can get it done with
sudo apt-get install libsfml-dev libglm-dev libeigen3-dev \
libglew-dev cmake libglu1-mesa-dev mesa-common-dev
You may need to install more (or fewer) libraries, depending on what do you already have on your system.
How to Install on Ubuntu 20.04
The first step is
to download and install
AntTweakBar library. I
assume you have unpacked it into Downloads folder. The
installation
is as easy as running make
in AntTweakBar/src
folder. As a result,
make should create libAntTweakBar.a
and libAntTweakBar.so
in your
AntTweakBar/lib
folder. You may want to move those to a better
location, e.g. into $HOME/lib
.
This installation can be done with commands
cd ~/Downloads/AntTweakBar/src
make
The next task is to clone (or download)
Marble
Marcher.
In the following examples we assume you have downloaded
Marble Marcher into Downloads-folder as well.
First you create an empty folder build in the Marble Marcher
folder, and run cmake from there. However, and this is important,
for the following compilation step you
also have to specify the location of
AntTweakBar.h
and
libAntTweakBar.a
files using the CPATH
and LIBRARY_PATH
environment variables. You can do all these steps as follows:
cd ~/Downloads
git clone https://github.com/WAUthethird/Marble-Marcher-Community-Edition.git
cd Marble-Marcher-Community-Edition
mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
CPATH="$HOME/Downloads/AntTweakBar/include/" LIBRARY_PATH="$HOME/Downloads/AntTweakBar/lib" cmake --build .
This should create an executable file MarbleMarcher
in the current
src
folder.
The executable needs libAntTweakBar.so
run-time library for running.
So when executing it, you have to tell it where the library is by
using LD_LIBRARY_PATH
environment
variable. Hence you run the game as
LD_LIBRARY_PATH="$HOME/Downloads/AntTweakBar/lib" ./MarbleMarcher
Consider moving libAntTweakBar.so
into a dedicated location for
run-time libraries and configuring your LD_LIBRARY_PATH
.
Enjoy!
Installing on Ubuntu 18.04
Compiling on Ubuntu 18.04 works mostly in the same way as on Ubuntu 20.04. However, the default gcc 7.5.0 is too old for the source code. You have to use gcc 8.4.0, provided in the package gcc-8. First, install all the packages required for Ubuntu 20.04. Thereafter also install gcc-8:
sudo apt-get install libsfml-dev libglm-dev libeigen3-dev \
libglew-dev cmake libglu1-mesa-dev mesa-common-dev
sudo apt-get install gcc-8
Next, as the default gcc is still version 7, we have to tell make and cmake explicitly that we we want gcc 8 instead.
Open AntTweakBar/src/Makefile
in a text editor (e.g. gedit),
and set the make variables CXX
and
LINK
(see lines 18 and 21) to gcc-8
and g++-8
.
So the relevant lines should
look like
CXX = gcc-8
CXXFLAGS = $(CXXCFG) -Wall -fPIC -fno-strict-aliasing -D_UNIX -D__PLACEMENT_NEW_INLINE
INCPATH = -I../include -I/usr/local/include -I/usr/X11R6/include -I/usr/include
LINK = g++-8
Now run make
in the src-folder as in case of Ubuntu 20.04:
cd AntTweakBar/src
make
Cloning Marble Marcher on Ubuntu 18.04 works exactly as on Ubuntu 20.04.
But now, when creating cmake environment, we tell cmake that we use
gcc-8 by setting CC
and CXX
environment variables.
Otherwise we follow exactly the steps for
Ubuntu 20.04. So on 18.04 you can do
cd ~/Downloads
git clone https://github.com/WAUthethird/Marble-Marcher-Community-Edition.git
cd Marble-Marcher-Community-Edition
mkdir build
cd build
CC=/usr/bin/gcc-8 CXX=/usr/bin/g++-8 cmake ..
CPATH="$HOME/Downloads/AntTweakBar/include/" LIBRARY_PATH="$HOME/Downloads/AntTweakBar/lib" cmake --build .
As above, your should see the executable MarbleMarcher that can be started with
LD_LIBRARY_PATH="$HOME/Downloads/AntTweakBar/lib" ./MarbleMarcher
Compiling on Windows
Windows compilation should work just fine now. It's relatively easy to do without help, but in case you'd like them, here are some configuring and compiling instructions. A copy of the instructions is also in the root.
Cross-Compile for Windows on macOS
This requires you to install wget, mingw-w64, and git (which you probably already have) either with HomeBrew (recommended) or otherwise. Theoretically, you should be able to just run winMacOSBuild.sh
. There are no manual instructions because due to issues I had to just compile the thing manually which is annoying and has too many steps.
Launching
macOS
If the macOS build script was used, simply launch the app as normal, otherwise:
- Make sure that the current working directory contains the
assets
folder - Run the executable generated by CMake, located in
build
(or a subdirectory) - If running MarbleMarcher from a tarball and you see a message like
./MarbleMarcher: error while loading shared libraries: libsfml-graphics.so.2.5: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory You'll just need to run MarbleMarcher with the correct
LD_LIBRARY_PATH
:
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=`pwd`/usr/lib ./MarbleMarcher
Windows/Linux/Anything Else
Launching should be self-explanatory for these systems, just run the excecutable file relevant to your system that is generated by the build process.
Special Controls
- Press
o
to toggle the debug screen. - Press
F5
to take a screenshot. - Press
F4
to open AntTweakBar.
Troubleshooting/FAQ
- Why am I getting compute shader compilation errors?
- If you are running a release binary fully tested by us to be functional, such as those found in the Releases tab, it is most likely a graphics card or driver issue. Try updating your graphics drivers, and if that doesn't fix the problem, take a look at the card itself. If you are a Radeon user, compute shaders are either unsupported or not fully supported on cards before the HD 7000 series. If this is the case, you will need to upgrade if you would like to play the game. Otherwise, if you compiled it yourself, whether by our official instructions or for a non-supported operating system, please open an issue and post the error logs.