/SuperLuigiLandWii

Source code and tools for the Super Luigi Land Wii game mod, based off of the Newer Super Mario Bros. Wii source code.

Primary LanguageC++MIT LicenseMIT

Super Luigi Land Wii

Source Code Public Release

This is the source code of the Super Luigi Land Wii mod, which you can download by clicking right here.

The source code of this mod is based off of the Newer Super Mario Bros. Wii source code, hence why this repo is a fork of it.

If you use any of our code for your mod, please credit the New Luigi Team.

Version 1.1

This commit contains the source code of the version 1.1 of this game, which is NOT made for modding, as it contains tons of hardcoded things.

As the major new feature from this version is the translation support and it can be quite useful for other modders, a version of Newer Super Mario Bros. Wii that will have translation support is currently in the works, with the least amount of hardcoded things possible, I promise :)

Until then, feel free to look at the code, if you have any request, feel free to contact me on Discord: RedStoneMatt#2826 !

If you want to mod our game and its source code, you can still find the v1.0 source code in the releases tab !

That's all, have a nice day !

(You can find the original README wrote by Treeki down below.)

Preamble

Well, here it is, the thing you've been awaiting for... years. Yep. My original plans were to majorly clean up and reorganise the codebase and tools, because I really wasn't satisfied with the current state of them.

Unfortunately, this didn't quite pan out - as much as I'd like to have done this, getting everything into the state I wanted would require months upon months of work - something that's a bit difficult to do nowadays, since Newer is done and I don't wish to devote yet more of my life to projects related to NSMBW.

So... I've decided to dump the source code here so other people can do something with this. Much of it isn't really in a usable state - but I'm releasing it in case someone else wants to take up development and work on getting everything polished and ready.

-Treeki, 22nd November 2013

Licensing

The Newer SMBW source code and tools are released under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file in this repository for full details.

Copyright (c) 2010-2013 Treeki, Tempus, megazig

Requirements

For compiling the Newer game hacks:

  • OS and setup where you can compile LLVM and Clang
  • devkitPPC
  • Python 2.x
  • Python libraries: PyYAML, pyelftools

For using the Newer tools:

  • Windows, Linux or Mac OS
  • Python 2.x
  • PyQt
  • Possibly something else I forgot?

What's Here

Clang Patchset

Newer requires a modified version of the Clang compiler. Clang is a modern C/C++ compiler created as part of the LLVM project, and Newer uses it to generate compiled code that can be injected into the game.

Most Wii homebrew development is done using GCC (usually as part of devkitPPC), but regular compilers cannot be used because the generated code uses a different C++ ABI from CodeWarrior (which is what Nintendo uses) and therefore is not compatible with the NSMBW binary.

My (admittedly, very kludgey) patches to Clang modify various aspects of the generated code to work round this. It's not perfect: in particular, multiple inheritance and RTTI are not compatible and possibly entirely broken. Thankfully NSMBW doesn't really make use of these features, so it works just fine for Newer.

Another caveat is that I stopped working on this a few months back, so you'll need to pull an old-ish version of LLVM and Clang from their SVN repos - the patch I included is based off SVN revision 184655. LLVM is unmodified, but you should probably also stick to this version of it to avoid possible incompatibilities.

Kamek

All the Newer hacks are inside the Kamek folder in this repository because that's how our files have always been organised, but technically, Kamek is really just a simple build system for calling the tools to compile/assemble each source file and putting together an output file you can inject into your game.

Unlike most typical build systems, though, there's a bunch of features specific to game hacks like Newer:

  • Kamek is configured through a game-specific project file; each project pulls in various modules, which can each contain C++ and assembly source files, and hooks
  • Hooks are different types of patches that are used to inject things into the game: patch static code/data in RAM, overwrite pointers with a reference to a symbol exported from Kamek code, inject branch instructions, ...
  • Memory addresses in the linker script and used by hooks are automatically converted to match all supported game versions - Kamek uses the original version of the PAL/European NSMBW release as a reference.
  • The compiled output is converted to a specific format expected by the Newer loader.

There's also a few things I'm not quite happy with...

  • The projects/modules system turned out to be rather messy in Newer
  • I think there's some features which just aren't used any more because the Newer loader changed over time.
  • I wanted to add some NSMBW-specific features, like an easy way to inject new actors and sprites without having to modify the data structures using very-easy-to-mess-up Kamek hooks, but I never got round to this

Newer Hacks

The stuff that makes this game tick. Thousands of lines of C++ code, a smattering of assembly, tons of patches, and a lot of blood, sweat and tears. (No Treekis or Tempuses were harmed in the creation of these. Well. Not harmed THAT much, anyway.)

You'll need to set up the stuff in the above two sections to be able to build your own copy of the hacks.

This is the source code for the unfinished release with translation support, so there's likely to be some bugs here. In particular:

  • Expect to see some broken stuff with translations: wrong messages, etc.
  • The final boss battle doesn't work. I never managed to figure out why.
  • Possibly other things are broken?

Koopatlas

Where do I even begin with this...

This is the editor half of Koopatlas - a totally new 2D map engine we wrote for Newer. Without going into too much detail, here's a quick roundup:

  • Ridiculously buggy and unpolished editor
  • 2D maps with an unlimited* amount of layers
  • Tileset layers, supporting an unlimited* amount of tilesets
  • Doodad layers, allowing you to place arbitrary textures on the map at any position and scale/rotate them
  • Doodad animations
  • Unlockable paths and level nodes
  • More hardcoded things than you can shake a stick at (possibly rivalling Nintendo's 3D maps)
  • Multiple maps with entrances/exits a la Reggie
  • Maps are stored in a ".kpmap" format for easy editability - a JSON file in a specific format - and exported to an optimised ".kpbin" format for usage in-game

*Unlimited: Not really. This is the Wii, a game console which was underpowered when it was released in 2006. There's not a lot of room in RAM for lots of tilesets and doodads. A couple of the Newer maps use up almost all the available space, so...

If you want to make maps, feel free to try it. Then bash your head against a wall when you accidentally close the editor and lose your unsaved work because there's no warning against that. Or when it crashes on you, which might happen.

Misc Tools

There's a bunch of scripts in here which do... things. Most of them might not be useful in their current state. Just look through and see what you can gather, I guess.

Don't ask me why the random tiles script is in Ruby. Well, if you really want to know, I was learning Ruby at the time and wanted to write stuff in it to improve my skills...

So how DO I use this junk?

Good question.

I could probably write an entire book (or two) documenting how to set up the tools, the internals of the NSMBW game engine, and everything I added in Newer. But... do you have any idea how long that would take?

The setup procedures aren't really documented at all, but I'm hoping that anyone with the skills to actually work on this stuff will be able to figure out what they're doing and get it running by looking at the error messages.

As for the game engine APIs - I'd love to document these, but it would simply take way, way too long. Let me know if you have any technical questions involving these: post in the thread on RVLution, or query me on Freenode IRC (my nick is always Treeki).