End user documentation site for Sketchy Maze. https://www.sketchymaze.com/guidebook/
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Creating Custom Levels

One of the core gameplay features is the Level Editor which lets you draw your own custom maps to play and share with others.

From the game's Main Menu, click on the "Create a Level" button to open the level editor. To edit an existing custom level, click on the "Edit a Level" button instead.

Level Properties

When creating a new level, you first choose some settings for it. These are described below:

Screenshot of New Level dialog

Page Type

This setting controls the size and boundaries of your level, and control the appearance of the notebook paper background of your level.

  • Bounded is the default. The camera won't scroll past the top-left corner of the page (0,0), and the level size is capped to 2550x3300, or the approximate size of an 11:9 standard sheet of notebook paper in pixels.
  • No Negative Space is like Bounded, but the width and height of the level have no boundary. Levels can grow "infinitely" to the right and downward but no negative coordinates past the top or left edge.
  • Unbounded allows for "infinite" sized maps that give unlimited room to grow your level. The wallpaper on this level type only uses the "tiling" pattern, so notebook-themed levels won't show the top/left decorations.

You can change these settings later if you change your mind.

Wallpaper

Wallpaper options on New Level

The wallpaper affects the "theme" of your level. Sketchy Maze is themed around hand-drawn mazes on paper, so the built-in themes look like various kinds of paper.

  • Notebook looks like standard ruled notebook paper. It's a white paper with blue horizontal lines, a single red vertical line down the left, and a wide margin on the top and left edges.
  • Legal Pad looks like ruled yellow legal pad. It's similar to Notebook but has yellow paper and a second vertical red line down the left.
  • Graph paper new in v0.6.0 is a white paper with a repeating grid pattern of light-grey lines about 32px each; a darker dotted gray grid every 3x3 units; and a teal grid every 6x6 units. A light version of Blueprint.
  • Dotted paper new in v0.6.0 is a white page with a repeating pattern of single dots every 32 pixels apart. Most dots are light blue but with a grid of red dots every 6x6 units. It has the same grid spacing as the Graph paper.
  • Blueprint is a dark blueprint paper background with a repeating grid pattern. A dark version of Graph paper; you'll want to pair it with the Blueprint Palette which has light colors for level geometry by default.
  • Pure White is a blank, white (#FFFFFE) background color with nothing going on except for what you draw on your level.
  • Custom wallpaper... lets you use your own wallpaper image. See Custom Wallpaper.

The decorations of the wallpaper vary based on the Page Type. For example, the Notebook and Legal Pad have extra padding on the top of the page and red lines going down just the left side, and the rest of the level uses the repeating blue lines pattern. The page types and their effect on the wallpapers are:

  • Bounded and No Negative Space will show the decorations for the top and left edges of the page, as these levels are bounded on their top/left corner.
  • Unbounded levels only use the repeating tiled pattern across the entire level, because there is no top-left boundary to anchor those decorations to.

Default Palette

When starting a new level, you may choose a default Palette to start out with. The available options as of version 0.6.0 are:

  • Default: the classic palette from previous alpha game releases.
    1. solid: black, solid geometry
    2. decoration: light grey
    3. fire: red, fire
    4. water: blue, water
  • Colored Pencil: a new palette with some more varied default colors.
    1. grass: green, solid geometry
    2. dirt: brown, solid
    3. stone: dark grey, solid
    4. fire: red, fire
    5. water: light blue (#0099FF), water
  • Blueprint: the classic palette for levels with the Blueprint wallpaper:
    1. solid: white, solid
    2. decoration: light grey
    3. fire: light red (#FF5000), fire
    4. water: light blue (#0099FF), water
    5. electric: yellow, solid

In earlier alpha versions of the game, the Blueprint palette was chosen by default when the level starts out with the Blueprint wallpaper, which has a very dark background color and Blueprint was basically a bright version of the Default palette. As of v0.6.0, the user can select the palette separately from the wallpaper.

If you're using the Blueprint wallpaper, pick the Colored Pencil or Blueprint palettes for best results: the default black color for level geometry won't show well on the Blueprint wallpaper!

Editor Interface

Level Editor View

This is the level editor. You can click and drag on the blank page and begin drawing a level. The toolbar down the left has various drawing tools: Pencil (freehand), Line, Rectangle, Ellipse. The toolbar down the right is your level palette. You can mouse-over most buttons and see an immediate tooltip appear that describes what it is.

Quick 5-second overview of the editor interface:

  • The top of the window has your Menu Bar, a common sight on desktop applications.
  • The panel on the left side of the window is your Tool Box. Clicking these buttons activates a specific drawing tool or mode:
    • **Pencil Tool** lets you click, drag, and draw pixels of your selected Palette color onto your level freehand. Shortcut key: `f`
    • **Line Tool** lets you easily draw a straight line between two points. Click in your level where you want the first point to be, and drag your mouse to the second point. Release the mouse to commit the line to your drawing. Shortcut key: `l`
    • **Rectangle Tool** lets you easily draw rectangles on your level. Shortcut: `r`
    • **Ellipse Tool** lets you draw circles or elliptical shapes. Shortcut: `c`
    • **Doodad Tool** lets you drag doodads such as buttons and doors onto your level. See the [Doodad Tool](#doodad-tool) below. Shortcut: `d`
    • **Link Tool** lets you link doodads together so that they can interact off each other. For example, a Button connected to an Electric Door will cause the door to open and close when the button is pressed. See [Link Tool](#link-tool) below.
    • **Eraser Tool** cleans up your mistakes. Click and drag over pixels you've drawn to delete the pixels from your level. Shortcut: `x`
  • The Size: label on the left controls the brush size of your current drawing tool. This translates to the line thickness, or how big your pixels are when drawn into the level. Click the + and - buttons to increase or decrease the brush size, and draw thicker or thinner lines.
  • The panel on the right side of the window is your Palette of colors to draw with. Mouse over a color to see its name and properties -- different colors may mean different things!
    • The Edit button will open the Palette Editor where you can change a color, rename it, and set its properties. See Color Attributes

Doodad Tool

When clicking on the Doodad Tool or pressing the d key, the Doodads window will appear in the level editor:

Doodads window

Doodads are objects you drag and drop into your level to add interactive elements such as enemies and buttons. Mousing over a doodad will tell you its name, and the pager buttons at the bottom can show more options. See the list of built-in doodads for details on what each one does.

Click and drag a doodad from the Doodads window onto your level to place it.

While the Doodad Tool is active on the left toolbar, when you mouse over an existing doodad on your level, and orange box will appear around it. You may click and drag to move this doodad somewhere else. Right-click it to remove it from your level.

  • Left click: move a doodad somewhere else on your level.
  • Right click: removes the doodad from your level.

Doodads provide various useful features to your level:

  • Keys and Locked Doors let you place collectible keys around the level which, when obtained, allow the player to permanently unlock doors of the same color and open new paths on the level. There are four pairs of keys and doors.
  • Buttons and Switches let you open and close Electric Doors and trigger other devices to which they are linked.
  • Trapdoors provide one-way gates; once the door has swung shut, it can not be entered from the wrong side!

To connect buttons to control doors, use the Link Tool.

How do I remove a doodad from my level?

Select the Doodad Tool to adjust the doodads already on your level.

To remove a doodad: either right-click on it or else drag it from your level back into the Doodads window and release, and it will be gone from your level.

The Link Tool allows you to pair two doodads on your level together. This allows the doodads to communicate events with each other, for example, so a button can open an electric door when pressed.

Link Tool

This screenshot shows several buttons and switches that are linked to several electric doors. With the Link Tool selected, mouse over a doodad on your level and a magenta box appears around it. Click on it, and then click on the other doodad to pair it to. A glowing magenta line will connect the two doodads together from then on, showing their connection.

Note: there seems to be no way to un-link two doodads once linked, deleting one from your level and placing a new one will break the links.

Linked doodads are able to send small messages to their linked partners when events happen to them. For example, when the player character steps on a button it sends a "power on" signal to the door it's connected to, and the door opens. When the button is released, it sends a "power off" signal and the door closes.

See the Doodads page for a description of the game's built-in doodads and how they interact with each other.


Palette Editor

Screenshot of the Level Palette editor

The Palette is the set of colors that you draw your actual level with. In your default palette, some colors are designated as "solid" and will be used for the walls and floors of your level, while others may be "fire" or "water" or just decoration (not colliding with the player characters).

You may edit or extend the palette to your liking. By Clicking the "Tools" menu and "Edit Palette", or clicking the "Edit" button on the palette toolbar on the right side of the screen, you will open the Palette Editor.

Levels are designed to have a limited color palette, and this is your selection of colors for the level or doodad you're drawing. You can click on "Add Color" to create more rows as needed. There isn't a maximum bounds on number of distinct colors, however, the user interface will not accommodate too many of them. This game is themed around "hand-drawn maps on paper" and pretend each color is a pen or marker and how many distinct colors do you need?

NOTICE: Modifying the color of an existing swatch on your Palette will also change any pixels already on your level to the new color. Drawings in this game use an indexed palette, similar to GIF and some PNG images!

Brush Patterns

A color swatch on your palette may have a Brush Pattern (labeled "Tex") applied to it which will vary the look of your color once drawn onto your level. For example, instead of a red color drawing on as solid red pixels, it can take on a more noisy pattern resembling colored pencil graphite or marker.

Screenshot showing various brush patterns

The pattern when drawn onto your level is a cosmetic-only effect: you can change the pattern after the fact, or remove the pattern altogether, and your level immediately updates.

In the future, you will be able to add your own custom pattern images but for now there are a handful of built-in options to choose from.

Color Attributes

The Attributes column toggles behaviors on or off for this color. In the default color palette, black pixels make up your solid level geometry, red pixels are fire, and blue pixels are water.

By default the color will be purely decorative, not physically colliding with the player or affecting them in any way.

The attributes and their meanings are:

  • Solid: the player character and other mobile doodads will collide against pixels drawn in this color. Useful for your level geometry.
  • Fire: if the player touches pixels of this color, they die!
  • Water: will act like water, currently it just draws the player blue.

Changing Colors

Clicking on the colored square will prompt you to enter a new color in hexadecimal notation, like #FF00FF for magenta or #0099FF for light blue. Colors can be entered in the following formats (the # prefix is actually optional):

  • 3-digit hexadecimal: #F0F or #09F
  • 6-digit hexadecimal: #0099FF or #FC390E
  • 8-digit RGBA: #0000FF99 - a color with semi-transparency!

You can set the color to be semi-transparent by providing the 8-digit RGBA color code; the extra two digits control the transparency between 00 (fully invisible) and FF (fully opaque).

Enter an RGBA color value for see-thru colors


Menu Bar

While editing a level or doodad, a Menu Bar appears at the top of the screen. Its options include:

  • File
    • New level (Ctrl-N)
    • New doodad
    • Save (Ctrl-S)
    • Save as...
    • Publish level (attach custom doodads for easy sharing)
    • Open... (Ctrl-O)
    • Close level
    • Quit (Escape)
  • Edit
    • Undo (Ctrl-Z)
    • Redo (Ctrl-Y)
    • Settings
  • Level
    • Page settings (to change the level type or wallpaper)
    • Attached files
    • Playtest (P)
  • Tools
    • Debug overlay (F3)
    • Command shell (Enter)
    • Edit Palette
    • Pencil Tool (f)
    • Line Tool (L)
    • Rectangle Tool (r)
    • Ellipse Tool (c)
    • Eraser Tool (x)
    • Doodads (d)
    • Link Tool
  • Help
    • User Manual (F1)
    • Register
    • About