TO BE CLEAR: YOU NEED TO BE SOMEWHAT FAMILIAR WITH HOW PROGRAMMING WORKS IN ORDER TO ENJOY THIS GAME.
1000-BIT is an open-ended programming puzzle game (a "zach-like"), featuring a fictional programming language similar to C#. Your goal is to write functions similar to the ones below, such as: basic arithmetic, bitwise operations, mean and mode, running sum, and other fun math stuff.
The catch? Everything – everything – is in binary.
How do you calculate square roots in binary? That's up to you to figure out.
Going through the campaign defragments files that can help you unravel what happened to the employee you're tasked with replacing.
Every level has a WORDS and STEPS par that you can optimize for: this unlocks toys such as new fonts, text colors, visual effects, typing sounds and such.
There are now also 11000 bonus levels featuring decimal and string variables (yeah it kinda defeats the purpose of a binary-only programming language, but it's still pretty fun and fresh) once you beat the main campaign.
If you've enjoyed the likes of TIS-100, COMET 64, A=B, SIC-1, SHENZHEN I/O, you might like this game.
Features:
100000 tasks for you to solve and optimize;
100000 bonus tasks (for you to solve and optimize);
∞ solutions for each task;
1 task editor;
1001 toys to unlock, such as different fonts, colors, shaders;
1110 fragmented files, slowly revealing the
1 dark mystery in the
1 Red Room.
(All numbers listed above are, obviously, in binary.)
Minimum Setup
- OS: Ubuntu 22 LTS 64-bit
- Processor: AMD A4-1250 APU or Intel Pentium 957Memory: 4 GB RAM
- Memory: 4 GB RAM
- Graphics: AMD Radeon HD 8210 Graphics or Intel HD Graphics
- Storage: 50 MB available space
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