Big Number Clicker Game
You can post comments about my game on this Snap forum topic: https://forum.snap.berkeley.edu/t/clicker-game-unsafe-numbers-historical-computers/13960 Clicker games are very popular on Scratch but they all have a limited max number. With SNAP there is no ceiling. Easily collect 10,319,547,419,658,830 diamonds and watch the count continue to climb. This would normally be an unsafe whole number but it's okay here. Collect diamonds by clicking on the diamond and by buying robots that automatically collect the diamonds for you. You start out with one automatic collector that earns you one diamond per second. Send your program back in time to run on various historical computers. When it returns your automatic collectors will have spent years collecting diamonds. TRS-80 picture from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:TRS-80_Model_I_with_Drives.jpg This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license. It was the most popular microcomputer in the year 1977. "TRS-80 had close to a 70% market share in 1977" http://www.trs-80.org/was-the-trs-80-once-the-top-selling-computer/ PDP-8 It was the first commercially successful minicomputer. (Wikipedia) introduced on 22 March 1965 Photo: This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license. from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:PDP-8_(1).jpg Eniac ENIAC was completed in 1945 (Wikipedia). First computer to run at electronic speeds. (https://www.computerhistory.org/) All photos marked "U. S. Army Photo" are in the public domain, and may be used without fee, provided that each use is marked "U. S. Army Photo". from https://ftp.arl.army.mil/ftp/historic-computers/ The diamond drawing is in the public domain and from https://freesvg.org/diamond-vector-image
Created March 2, 2023
Last updated March 29, 2023
Published March 14, 2023