Difference between revisions of "TASing"
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Shake for 1 frame, then shake + Z This is mostly used for getting a regular ground pound from a long jump, but can also be used for its spin properties, for example Major Burrows instant hits. | Shake for 1 frame, then shake + Z This is mostly used for getting a regular ground pound from a long jump, but can also be used for its spin properties, for example Major Burrows instant hits. | ||
''' | '''Airspin Cancel:''' | ||
Before landing, shake for 1 frame, then shake + Z. This is only useful in specific circumstances and has two different effects. | Before landing, shake for 1 frame, then shake + Z. This is only useful in specific circumstances and has two different effects: a 'spin' and a float. A ‘spin’ continues the spin animation but has a much lower height, whereas the float goes into a falling animation and is floatier with lower horizontal speed. This could be used to avoid land stuns not caused by launch stars, or to gain a bit of extra distance before lava boosts. It is also used to prevent Mario/Luigi floating for a bit after creating a cloud in SMG2 with the cloud flower. | ||
===Neutral Walljump Strain=== | |||
Going neutral on the Nunchuk stick after walljumping will give you more control over movement in the air, bypassing the fixed speed. If you then hold the direction of your facing angle, you will gain more horizontal speed at the price of a little height (no more than 1 unit lost). If you hold opposite the facing angle, you will gain some more height and slow down significantly. | |||
===Mega Tricks=== | |||
There are a few ways to get more height (and sometimes speed) than usual… | |||
'''Mega Double/Triple Jumps''' | |||
These are done by jumping, manipulating gravity or moving platforms for horizontal speed and/or vertical tilt, and then going neutral on the joystick 1 frame before landing, and then pressing A to jump. | |||
The neutral action typically conserves more momentum and tilt than any directional input, although in some examples more height has been gained by holding the direction opposite your trajectory. The most well-known example is the Sludgyhop in Space Junk 1. | |||
'''Mega Sideflips''' | |||
In areas with a particular camera (understood to be XZ_PARA, which does not rotate on its own) and with a certain angle, you can sideflip and hold an angle adjacent to your sideflip angles to strangely get a lot of height. | |||
Inputs would look like: Up | Neutral | Down | A + Left/Right | Hold Left/Right | |||
If the camera can be manipulated with movement before entering its area, this can have an impact on MSF height, and can sometimes even be the difference for the trick to work. An example of this is when doing the Beach Bowl Secret MSF route, where grabbing different points of the ledge to the parallel waterfalls (at which point the camera would activate) would affect the height of the MSF there. | |||
Some MSF areas require holding an angle not directly adjacent but barely outside of the stick deadzone. | |||
'''Mega Wallkicks''' | |||
See Glitchy Wallkicks. | |||
'''Mega Ledge Grabs''' | |||
No understanding. Automatic ledge grab jumps occur when you approach a ledge with a lot of vertical speed, and sometimes they can get a lot of height. |
Revision as of 18:33, 18 June 2021
What is a TAS?
TAS stands for "Tool-Assisted Speedrun". TASers will slow down the game in an emulator, and use savestates to push the game to its limits and make a theoretical "perfect" speedrun, or showcase interesting mechanics that can not be performed by humans. For more information about TASing, head to tasvideos.org
Super Mario Galaxy TASes
The Current TAS WIP for SMG1 Any% is being made by Xander and PurpleSun. Current progress for this TAS can be found here.
A seperate Any Luigi TAS is also in the works, being made by Toogs, and can be found here.
The current TAS WIP for SMG2 Any% is being made by Shadow64 and PurpleSun. Current progress for this TAS can be found here.
Along with full game TASes, there are many people trying to optimise Individual Level TASes. The fastest TAS ILs for SMG1 can be found here, and the fastest TAS ILs for SMG2 can be found here.
If you have any questions about SMG TASing, head over to the Discord Server
SMG TAS Tech
Instant Backflips (IBFs) & Instant Sideflips (ISFs)
IBFs are typically done by holding neutral for 2 frames before landing, then Z + any direction on the frame you land, and then A on the next frame.
ISFs are weird; they are typically done by falling backwards then holding Z + pressing A either on the frame you land or 1 frame before.
Goomba Cancel
By shooting a Goomba with a starbit and having it spin into the player, Mario will go into a kicking animation and immediately start accelerating in any direction. This is faster than both DPad Cancels and Jump Cancels but it can only be done in specific scenarios
Spin Cancels
There are a few different spin cancel techniques, helpful in different ways.
Spin cancel jump (SCJ), Spin cancel long jump (SCLJ):
Shake for 2 frames and press A (can include special jumps e.g. while running, shake 2f then Z + A for a spin cancel long jump). This cancels the slow spinning animation but keeps spin properties so you can hit anything during the jump until it reaches its peak.
Spin cancel ground pound/frame perfect ground pound (FPGP):
Shake for 1 frame, then shake + Z This is mostly used for getting a regular ground pound from a long jump, but can also be used for its spin properties, for example Major Burrows instant hits.
Airspin Cancel:
Before landing, shake for 1 frame, then shake + Z. This is only useful in specific circumstances and has two different effects: a 'spin' and a float. A ‘spin’ continues the spin animation but has a much lower height, whereas the float goes into a falling animation and is floatier with lower horizontal speed. This could be used to avoid land stuns not caused by launch stars, or to gain a bit of extra distance before lava boosts. It is also used to prevent Mario/Luigi floating for a bit after creating a cloud in SMG2 with the cloud flower.
Neutral Walljump Strain
Going neutral on the Nunchuk stick after walljumping will give you more control over movement in the air, bypassing the fixed speed. If you then hold the direction of your facing angle, you will gain more horizontal speed at the price of a little height (no more than 1 unit lost). If you hold opposite the facing angle, you will gain some more height and slow down significantly.
Mega Tricks
There are a few ways to get more height (and sometimes speed) than usual…
Mega Double/Triple Jumps
These are done by jumping, manipulating gravity or moving platforms for horizontal speed and/or vertical tilt, and then going neutral on the joystick 1 frame before landing, and then pressing A to jump. The neutral action typically conserves more momentum and tilt than any directional input, although in some examples more height has been gained by holding the direction opposite your trajectory. The most well-known example is the Sludgyhop in Space Junk 1.
Mega Sideflips
In areas with a particular camera (understood to be XZ_PARA, which does not rotate on its own) and with a certain angle, you can sideflip and hold an angle adjacent to your sideflip angles to strangely get a lot of height. Inputs would look like: Up | Neutral | Down | A + Left/Right | Hold Left/Right
If the camera can be manipulated with movement before entering its area, this can have an impact on MSF height, and can sometimes even be the difference for the trick to work. An example of this is when doing the Beach Bowl Secret MSF route, where grabbing different points of the ledge to the parallel waterfalls (at which point the camera would activate) would affect the height of the MSF there. Some MSF areas require holding an angle not directly adjacent but barely outside of the stick deadzone.
Mega Wallkicks See Glitchy Wallkicks.
Mega Ledge Grabs
No understanding. Automatic ledge grab jumps occur when you approach a ledge with a lot of vertical speed, and sometimes they can get a lot of height.