Well, that sucks. That would've been better. But noooo. Windows has to be a crybaby and complain about everything. "Oh my god! A game is uninstalling itself? I gotta fucking remove this virus!" @JuniperDev
@@jarielwilliams9856 That's intended behavior, and should never ever change. A program uninstalling itself without the control of a user is malware behavior, regardless of the source and intention. If Microsoft ever allowed this, it would create a ton of security vulnerabilities. I agree, it would've been funny and scary, but there's a limit you have to not pass if you want your game to still be considered a game in front of the OS's eyes.
@@libsh5684 No it's not It's never stated An easter egg telling a Dog made a game by barking into a typewriter doesn't mean that's how Undertale uniberse came to be Quit simping!
Honestly, the fact that Undertale is a poorly coded game makes Undertale even more of an inspiration. If even a rookie developer can make such a fantastic game, then you can too!
That’s kinda why I use it as inspiration too. Kinda what made me ever consider if I want to learn to make video games. I probably won’t ever be able to make a full project, but I can dream!
@@ssg-eggunner if you feel you can't do what Toby did, just try a smaller scope! Find something that you feel you can do by yourself and just do it! Even if it never sees the light of day, you'll have a blast!
@@AnimatingBeats you don't have to start with a full proejct!! Toby started with ROM hacks, UniqueGeese started with a Garten of Banban remake, you can start with a small scope, like a 10-minute to 1 hour-long game. Once you feel comfortable doing stuff like that, you can dream bigger! It's better to have a complete small project than an incomplete big one!
@mrwilsonisofflinegape577 Buddy, Metal Gear Rising is almost 11 years old and it still gets talked about today. If we go even older than that we have Ocarina of Time or Doom, or Minecraft.
I HATE inconsistent pixel lengths with a burning passion... but I still somehow managed to get through Undertale without rupturing a hernia. Who knows how.
Hahah! I laughed too hard at this. I diligently start every project with absolute star level folder and consistency. A week into the code base. I realize star level means you can pick a star in the sky and I’ve probably put a bit of glue, duct tape and code in it. 😂😂
It's called "modular design" By which I mean I grabbed a bunch of hastily-coded, self-contained functions and stitched them together as needed. And plagiarized as much open source as I could get away with.
1:57 I think the genocide route we ended up getting is actually more meaningful than if the game was deleted. To me the true "canon" ending of undertale is the post-genocide pacifist run were you trying to redeem yourself for the horrible things you've done only to see that your soul has been irreversibly tainted and you can never have your happy ending again.
Yeahhhhh Undertale is held together by a bunch of sticks and glue 😅it's honestly kind of miraculous that it not only works, but also that most playthroughs really don't see many glaring bugs at all
MYSTIC! You have been all over my feed while I've been making this video haha. Seriously, creators like you are a big reason the community behind this game is still thriving and videos like mine are still interesting to people. Kudos!!
1:35 that's og oneshot, modern oneshot allows you to close the game but scolds you for it by saying it scares Niko as they're alone and dark when the window closes
@@SMCwasTaken at the same time though a lot of those games were sort of ingenious if you think about how much memory and space they took up like literal MBs of info which to me I think is awesome, like we laugh at how janky they are but a lot of those were written with basically assembly which is definitely pretty awesome
To be fair, undertale was made ONLY BY HIM (when we talk about code), and even so the game came out working good, no lag, no bugs (except if you want to make one), etc. That's the reason why deltarune is making more faster than undertale and looking better in code because toby get better, game maker upgrade his system and there's more people working on it. Fun fact: one of the few reasons why the game don't deleated himself in the final version is because in some places a game where you have to pay but gets deleted by his own is ilegal.
3:01 fun fact: I saw on a yt video about unused undertale content that this flowey sprite was gonna be used if you manage to oneshot Asgore by hacking the game
@@BlueBoyTech yeah, for it to be faster one needs to load the file into memory and then map every entry to an array, which would be the same as a switch statement (maybe a little more organized). However, when it comes to Undertale.. it doesn't really matter
no it is. but also.. that's not the problem. the problem was that everytime he wanted to add more dialogue, he'd have to string together multiple codes to get it working. in a proper npc system you would just write the dialogue and the game would read it.
It's still a bad solution. If you wanted to actually get the speed advantage of using memory instead of reading from a file, you would use the file, but load its content into a lookup table/map in memory. Then you could just access each dialogue section with a key like "sans-intro" or "toriel-boss-start"
@@BlueBoyTech A separate config file for dialog is really useful for localization specifically, as you can switch out the file for different translations.
@@ShayyTV Yooo!! Neat seeing you here! That makes a lot of sense bahahah, I was debating between showing a couple areas that seemed to have the gag surrounding conveyer belts. I appreciate the clarification!
5:00 For your knowledge: Computers are really fast at everything. Going through thousands of statements does not require a lot of computing power, however if that is done every frame (which it isn't here) it could take away crucial computing power from other tasks. So, Toby's approach is dubious, but ultimately fine.
Interestingly, the switch statement would theoretically be the best solution if you could design it in a jump table statement, where every single condition gets assigned a number and the code is spread out in a massive array, the number corresponding to the array position of the code. This would make it O(1). But yeah, sometimes you want to keep it simple, it is not an area where performance matters at all.
@@briannormant3622 in a compiled language yeah, but I think gamemaker has its own interpreted language or something. It's a mystery to me how it handles switch statements.
really, i think the only reason that such an approach is frowned upon is that it makes localization harder, since if the dialogue is stored externally, localizing the text to another language is just a matter of replacing it, whereas baking the dialogue into the executable like that means that translating the game's text to another language requires you to recompile the game entirely
@@briannormant3622 _technically_, the default way to make a jump table - as the name implies - requires an extra layer of indirection from an array. as the array/table that's built gets you "the direction to jump to to run the code there", not "the dialogue data itself". as long as dialogue data is always the same (and there isn't some extra preparation code for some special dialogues) an actual array would be faster. unless the compiler realizes the data is the same and makes a genuine array as a second optimization that being said i doubt GML even makes a jump table in the first place
4:47 Minor correction: Unlike a list of if statements, where you run the dialogue ID through X amount of statements one after the other. Switch statements, on the other hand, use a hashlist that tells the game what part of the program to jump to in order to execute the right code. Like it's a messy blob function that could be written in a more coherent way, but coming from a background of backend development, I've sort of just accepted that there are some situations where you will just have blobby code, and game design is one of those cases. So it's less "slow", and more "a visual affront to god"
I mean kudos to Undertale that as far as I can recall there aren’t really instances of id mismatch between triggers and dialogue output, but being the one to take a fine tooth comb to that hell blob probably took as much time as making a readable version of the tool would have. Like I’d straight up be mad if someone asked for a code review and showed me a 10k line switch case.
@@rakesiar not really just create a random value on new game and check if the value is below or above something and then do the thing u actually want to happen which is the hardest part
@@rakesiarSoftware engineer / game dev here: It’s actually pretty easy, the only hard part would be coding all the unique events (and that’s more of a content creation task). It’s as simple as doing something like: int funValue = Math.Rand(1,100) if (funValue > 57) { //add code for an event that will only happen if the fun value is greater than 57 } I think a lot of games tend to avoid this because they don’t like players to have a very randomized experience. It only works for certain types of games where it doesn’t harm the gameplay, otherwise it can be kinda annoying.
@@rakesiar Not particularly, just adding the feature would be extremely easy, the hard part would be adding the various possible events, and that would scale linearly with how many there are.
You should change the "Written" in the title to "Programmed", "Coded", "Developed" or "Designed", it'd still be plenty eyecatching for the youtube algorithm and wouldn't send people to just dislike and then click off which would tank the video and stop UA-cam from recommending it. But yeah I agree it's interesting how a game as great as undertale looks like it was just programmed on a napkin by a drunkard with a crayon behind the scenes.
@@sumas7 Yeah but it's short sighted, a title like the ones I suggested would still grab attention and get views without attracting angry mobs. Besides that is just a safer bet, if too many viewers dislike the video at its release window it gets butchered in the algorithm and UA-cam simply won't recommend it.
1:22 just want to add that this for those who haven’t played the game: this is only true in the original version, not the modern one on steam and world machine edition
Yeah, I remember the heartbound dev saying that you "don't need to be a good game dev to make a great game" in a shorts and using Undertale as example, so I actually didn't get clickbaited (Also, there is a code behind sans so...)
Sounds like it conflates game dev with just the technical side of game dev, neglecting the artistic side which is all about designing an experience for the player.
read the title. grabbed my pitchfork. then watched for a few seconds and realized: "yeah the code is just papyrus' spaghetti" and then put my pitchfork away
@@vibaj16no. if you have a name that ends with S, you don’t put another S when referring to something that belongs to the person with the name ending with S, so it’s just papyrus’
4:51 As far as I know, using switch is faster than using if, yes, the code reads worse, but internally the compiler makes optimizations that make it much faster, using a CSV you first have to read the file and I suppose you will load it in a map, which I think is a little slower than a defined switch, although they are small things that practically do not affect the performance of the game.
Deltarune is a pretty large step up from Undertale, so that means that the code has to be written cleaner so the game can actually work. Also he has a team now so the code has to be readable if they want to work on the game.
I disagree about the illusion of choice. When done correctly, it's a very useful tool that gives the player some sense of agency without spiraling off exponentially with every decision made. Plus having multiple paths to the same outcome is just realistic. Plus all you need to do is throw in some real choices, and then now the player doesn't know if the choice will matter or not. You do want a common experience between players. Not exactly the same experience, but they need to feel like they're playing the same game. And, for completionists, it needs to achievable to see all the content.
I think that's what Toby wants to do with Deltarune, since, you know, your choices don't matter. The last chapter will probably happen during the roaring, since I can't imagine any possible outcome of snowgrave
I actually really like when this is done in a way where the choices lead to very different dialog/scenes that eventually lead to the same outcome. Even if the overall story is the same, it feels unique enough to have a new experience
The main problem with illusion of choice is when there's literally zero depth to it. Instead of adding flavor it just brings extra attention to the fact that you have no agency. At least give *some* detour before joining back to the main route instead of "yes/no" ">no" "haha you don't mean that" "yes/no"
This video is awesome at explaining it, ive heard thor talk about this in particular during a stream and you just summed it up keep making these videos!
More accurate, and less clickbaity to say "Undertale is a horribly coded game" because everyone either knows that's true or would be interested to learn more about. (As a modder, it _is_ questionably programmed... Well, at least I was able to make plenty of progress on my Bug Fables mod of Undertale!)
extraordinarily rare oneshot mention in a random video the 2016 remake of oneshot doesn't do anything as extreme as deleting the entire game though, but it does do something similar by restricting your access to the rest of the game until your delete your save file or solving the puzzle related to it though OneShot becomes literal in the 2014 version as mentioned. however, there are versions where you get more than one attempt at the game
My experience messing around Undertale's code is when me and another guy working on technical stuff for an Undertale localization project, the other dude noticed me about a problem that when a player walk through Alphys's lab, they sometime got lag and even game crash. The reason for that is because of the screen displayer (that display Frisk's face) works by deleting and generating a sprite from the main surface (that draw everything inside the room) every single step, using function sprite_create_from_screen_x, which is sprite_create_from_surface but with application_surface. We have to modified the code to use surface_copy_part and the result is like day and night. There are more funny stuff we found inside the code but this one is the one I remembered the most.
I want to point out a few things: 1. Game optimization does matter. However, it's importance depends on what kind of a game you are making. 2. Switch statement are not inefficient. Inefficient is what's called an if ladder, because it will check conditions one by one. Switch statement are designed to determine what code should be executed in almost constant time. That's why it only accepts constant values as cases. So it's not that bad.
You're right that this is likely more efficient than a collection of equivalent If-Else Blocks but that's also not the alternative anyone should be shooting for. Switch statements are also not necessarily better than If-Else Blocks all the time. Switch statements frontload the condition checking, requiring a condition that accounts for all cases at once. If-Else blocks allow you to Shortcircuit the comparisons by putting the most common cases first, allowing you to skip the check for other cases in those situations. In short, you want to use Switch statements if all of the options share an easy to create and calculate condition, and If-Else blocks if there's not a whole lot of conditions or you could benefit from the shortcircuiting in most cases. Once you're looking at 50 or more cases, I personally think it's time to start considering another solution. I can't actually imagine everything that Switch statement has to consider in its condition to determine what case to go to every time. It would sound like time to use a data structure that organizes your data appropriately. Even just using an array and a collection of flags set as relevant events are triggered, and that can be easily combined via simple arithmetic to create the index, could be a cleaner solution. You would even be able to make multiple arrays like an NPC dialogue array, a story event array, a phone call array, and you could potentially further divide them by the areas they take place in If desired so that you don't have to load the array that contains the very first line of dialogue in the game into memory when you're in the Hotlands.
@RedOphiuchus I agree. this is definitely a bad design both for maintenance and performance. At least he was not making a raytraced sandbox game from scratch...
Two very important things: - Undertale is graphically good. The vast majority of visual assets seen in the game were cleaned up considerably by Temmie, produced from scratch by her, or done by another artist Toby hired. The entirety of Home, Snowdin, and many other areas were not only drawn and sprited entirely by Temmie, but even conceived in concept art by her first via fairly vague instructions from Toby. It is not an exaggeration to say Temmie is more important to Undertale's identity at many points in the game than Toby is. There was a strong effort to keep the look simple and reminiscent enough of what Toby himself would doodle, but most of the final product is by no means not a professional quality finish, nor something he could produce anything that feels remotely similar to. This confuses a lot of aspiring gamedevs into thinking they can still achieve what Undertale did with lower standards/ability. They cannot. -Toby's lack of ability to code his way out of a "Hello world" assignment is one of the many factors delaying Deltarune to year infinity. It is very much an issue and, much like the point above, should not be something that encourages aspiring game devs to skip over learning their fundies. Toby has been notably trying to use Temmie less on Deltarune also, and development and the product itself is suffering for that as well.
@@annagolikova5167 I'm honestly not sure. He mentioned in the 2022 commentary stream that he wants to be able to do as much of the visuals himself as he possibly can, but then he started simply giving more work to Gigi that would have gone to Temmie in Undertale. It's hard to figure out how he is thinking. Had he given Temmie the same role and freedom she had on Undertale, getting everything done for the game on the visual asset and design side would be done practically overnight with how good Temmie is these days. Maybe she simply charges too much now.
Question: I can see how the development would be suffering due to the lack of involvement of Tem. But why the product, too? Is there something from the already-released Deltarune chapters that bothered you and that you think clearly shows a downgrade from Undertale? Just to be clear, I'm not trying to criticize you, I am legitimately curious.
Yeah, Undertale is a cheap game. But it’s not cheap in its heart, literally. So much will and emotion is put into every corner of it. Honestly, it being so simple in its controls helps it’s worth blossom MORE, because the game is about subversive storytelling. It’s saying that beauty can be found in anything, and in anyone. And it’s up to you to give it that chance, and you do that so many times in the game that it eventually feels instinctual to the player. It gives someone good values without them even knowing it.
Yeahh but honestly that title made me avoid this video for a while bc it was so glaringly obvious that it was a clickbait. Im only here because UA-cam kept shoving this video into my recommended and I got tired of it
@@scizorscyther694 i don't think they meant to diss the game, they (maybe) thought that undertale having funi coding practices is common knowledge :P (especially thanks to the piratesoftware short that got quite popular recently)
About the OneShot closing thing, that’s kind of for the Freeware version on itch, the newer Steam version (and now Switch version) made it so it just saves your game to stop giving people figurative (and hopefully not literal) heart attacks. Just a casual OneShot fan here, thought I’d simply say something. But this video is honestly surprisingly neat, and Undertale sounds like a NIGHTMARE for Toby to have made- Yet he did it anywhere because why not.
I feel the need to clarify that larger switch statements do NOT impact performance. No matter how large the switch statement is, it will always take the same amount of time for the game to figure out which set of instructions need to be referred to -- effectively, they are the O(1) alternative to having a bunch of separate if statements. I will agree, Toby's method of handling dialogue events may seem kind of odd, but ultimately it looks more like a preferential thing to me. It seems like he was more fond of keeping everything in one place so that he could refer to different in-game events easier, instead of having to look in multiple different places around the game. That's just what I personally believe, though.
@@dracobot1223 My understanding is that the operating time depends on the compiler; you are correct that many languages do port those statements into a jump table automatically, making it o(1), but not all do. So without optimization generally o(n). And if it's thousands of cases, that optimization may be a binary search, so logn. I could definitely do some more thinking about that one and you definitely got me double checking. I appreciate your comment! 🍃
On a good compiler, you would be correct, but gamemaker studio uses an interpreted language. It's proprietary, so you can't know for certain but it probably does not do many optimisations, so it will still be O(n). In the end, it doesn't matter since computers are fast enough that you can do thousands of comparisons per second. I just checked in python, known for being slow, and it does 1,000,000 comparisons in 43 ms.
@@santania4719 Worst case scenario you need to write your own jump table and an interpreter so you can read the instructions that you're jumping to. Whoops! I meant to reply to someone else, still should show for everybody I think, but sorry that it looks like I'm replying to your entirely different comment.
@@JuniperDev Interestingly, I've just learned that switch statements in GameMaker may have not always compiled the same way. I remember getting an error when attempting to supply a non-constant in the case argument field, which led me to believe that switch statements were compiled as jump tables. It seems that this is no longer the case..? I'm not fully certain what this means in the context of the version of GameMaker that Toby used, either. For now I will say that I may have been the one spreading misinformation here, LOL.
Why on earth do people think switch for dialogue is slow? It's literally supposed to be faster than loading text from a disk and using a hashmap for dispatch.
Because most coders don't think about what the processor does to do to make their program happen. It's ugly so it's bad, and because it's bad it must be slow.
It may certainly be faster, but it sure seems way less maintainable. Like, if I had to add some extra dialogue for a new event into that statement, it feels like it'd be pretty difficult. I could be wrong, though. As I type this, I can imagine organizing the switch using some sort of standardized variable, making a new state for that variable, and then adding the line. Hm.
@@domojestic4155 You'd keep your dialogue and event IDs in a database and have a tool that automatically converts it to the switch statements or hashmap just before compilation. Ideally, you'd make proper scenario tools that handle all the optimization automatically.
It's not that it's slow (it can be slow), but it's the kind of system that if something breaks, it'll take you a few hours to fix. Or it's a lot harder to keep working as you expand the complexity of the script. It's slow in the way you develop, not necessarily how it executes at runtime.
@@domojestic4155 For sure, but also, he's the only one in there. In a larger production it would be a problem, but if he's the only one being a gremlin in his own code, then it is better and more "efficient" for it to make sense to him first and foremost. I feel like cleanliness is sometimes a bit of an arbitrary gold standard, especially in games (and especially especially with indie games) where building super robust systems is sometimes more work than it's worth in the end, or it would require a lot of backtracking to fix everything, re-break everything to re-build everything better... If you decide the experience matters more than the quality of the skeleton underneath (which imo should always be the way to go as a gamedev), then vOv
I remember that instead of figuring out any type of real pathing system or fixing several boundary issues, there's several Out of Bounds areas in Undertale that have "magic glass" (his words) that appears when you or Undyne walk on it. It's like instead of being able to get rid of a bug, he put a clown nose on it instead and said, "See, now it's a funny joke and not irritating at all!" and went to do something else. I sometimes wonder how the game would look if he knew beforehand just how popular Undertale would become.
this is honestly extremely encouraging. i want to get into game design but have found it challenging to approach and this video honestly made it seem better. just jump into it, doesnt matter if youre perfect. an unprofessional random guy did it pretty inefficiently and now its one of the most beloved games ever
Loved this video essay, if you make more of these trust that I'll be watching the whole way through. Super comfy watch, intriguing and informative. Earned a sub, guud shit.
If you think Undertale's dialogue being one giant switch statement is bad, look at VVVVVV. %90 of THE GAME (yes, the ENTIRE game) is one giant switch case statement
@@minestar2247I've been seeing you a lot recently. You're now one of the commenters. I see frequently. It's interesting how you keep reading you to comment sections and you keep finding familiar faces.
This very much reminds me of Thee Sims 2. It’s in my (and many other people’s) opinion the best Sims game to date, yet the code is so awful, that you have to jump through hoops _not_ to completely break the game beyond repair. Like, certain buttons in the game that you’re supposed to use will just break. Say you try to export a lot that Sims have lived in, the whole game has a chance of breaking because now there’s missing data and it’s just a beautiful mess of a game.
@@lunarskys2645 Be careful, if you want to mess around with breaking the game, go ahead, but you may not be able to open it if it gets too messed up. The broken faces could be fun to play with, though.
4:30 Excuse me, but isn't switch statement very efficient so it will jump into a certain place in a constant time no matter how many cases there are? From what I have seen in this video, I guess dialogs in the game work in a way that when an event that causes a dialog happens, the event asks a global switch statement to handle a number the event was given in advance. For example, the player hits an object, so the object requests the global switch statement to handle the object's pre-made number. In such a way the dialog shouldn't be inefficient, am I wrong?
3:57 I've seen enough Scratch projects (Scratch doesn't even HAVE switch statements. I've seen nested ifelses that go on for MILES) to know that it could be worse
Was he trying to delete the game from the game's own code or something? That's not a great way to do it. Spawn and use a separate process. Write an EXE to temp that kills the game and then deletes it. Or, if you want no traces of the game left, launch the game uninstaller in silent mode, and close out the game before it starts. Sure, you can possibly figure out a way to delete the actual files out from under you, if you know how to keep the game in memory while the files are removed. (Or if you're using Linux, which automatically handle this). But it's so easy for things to go wrong. Far better to separate things out. Of course, maybe the tool he used can't spawn new processes?
For the code to be running, wouldn't it already be in RAM? So it wouldn't need to worry about that? Also, another comment said that he did actually get it to work, but Windows detected it as a virus.
@@vibaj16 Like I said, it's not impossible to delete something while it's running. But it can be tricky. Running programs are often locked, to prevent other programs from messing with them while running. That idea that it was detected as a virus makes sense. It was trying to delete itself while it was still running. That's something viruses often do, to try and hide themselves. I'm not at all saying it can't be done. Just that it's attempting to do it in hard mode.
This is honestly inspiring, even though I don't have plans to seriously dev and release any games I've done stuff for fun and I always feel anxious about how bad my code must be because I really only know the basics and know nothing about optimization. Really inspiring knowing that one of the most beloved games is awfully coded.
Don't focus on memorizing stuff. It's all written down for you, and programming languages evolve and change all the time. There's always a more efficient way to write something. I'd just focus programming. Have your manual next to you, and have Stack Overflow and Reddit open.
Everything from its programming to the music to the dialogue was unorthodox, that’s what makes undertale so great. Toby went and did everything you aren’t supposed to do with a game, especially something like RPGs and made it into a game and IT WORKED.
5:30 Ah, the classic "I could program this object to be able to move with another object and spend hours debugging that, or I can fake the same thing through weaponized code jank because this is literally the only time I need it to move like this".
Great video! good humor and very cool message. Ive had lots of experiences with working on different art forms (games, film, etc..) where people judge for not having an education in it but it really doesn't mean you cant make something good.
8:18 Calling game maker free nowadays is like calling mushrooms a fruit. You can make web based games but that's it. They removed free Windows game development. That's paywall content unless you have the old version unlocked and installed before the switch.
As a programmer, I believe that what someone's code looks like is dependent on how their brain works. If it was easier for Toby to interpret one massive switch statement then so be it. Sometimes understanding is a lot more important than efficiency.
4:45 - This is actually the most efficient (from a performance standpoint) way to add dialogue variability. In a program, in any case, everything comes down to if-else. The only difference is how many layers of wrappers there will be - one in the form of a switch-case or 5-20 in the form of objects
...And this is why I'll probably never be able to make that game I wanna make. Gosh... It's kinda demotivating, honestly. As much as I WANT to make that concept, I'm not in the position that Toby was in. I don't have anyone to contact for help, really... And I'd have to make everything from scratch, despite not knowing how to code and being a mediocre sprite artist at best. (I'm also okay at music!) All in all... I uh... Wow I really wish I was just a bit more... Talented, ya know? Cause' despite everything I've achieved lately... I dunno. I just don't think I'll be able to overcome this one... But I'm definitely subscribing though, ya deserve it. (Sorry about the depressing tangent btw.)
@@Finleys_snek DUDE!! I feel you, but I think you are a lot more similar to Toby than you think. Game development isn't exactly a "talent", but more of a skill you practice and get better at over time. Even T man started somewhere. I haven't even released a game yet because I still have so far to go until my games are up to the standard I'll be proud of. But it's inevitable to get there someday, and the time will pass anyways (:
@@JuniperDev Well... Okay admittedly I do have quite a bit in common with him. (I might as well be Toby Fox ordered off of wish.) I certainly do appreciate the encouragement as well! But I dunno... I think the concept I have in mind is just... A bit too complex for my first project. (It's like... A LOT.)
This video is not what I thought it was. I thought it was about Toby being a bad NARRATIVE writer. The video itself is fine, but you might want to change the title to “Undertale is poorly coded” instead. Cool video though.
Subscribed after just viewing this. I like learning about the amount of expert or amateur effort put into gaming code. One day I shall do the same, for a rather disregarded genre.
I've heard that Toby was inspired by the Shin Megami Tensei series, it's where he got the idea for the talking to enemies especially, and that series is also has a good amount of code fuckery like accidentally making a boss a debug enemy with only 2 attacks, having a stat that does almost nothing, having magic damage thst decreases as you level, forgetting to compress layouts and having an underflow glitch where you can't increase your agility past like 27
Toby's other major gamedev experience before Undertale was the Halloween Hack, which is made on Earthbound, a game infamous for its horrific code. I can't include links in youtube comments, but if you're interested, look if you can find Mato's article about how the dialog system works in Earthbound, it's absolutely bonkers.
It’s so inspiring to see someone make such an amazing game on their own (+ an artist) with a free program. Really goes to show it’s not the things you use to make something, but how *you* make it.
I love how the title of the video makes it seem like it will give you a heart attack when in the end it's just about: "OK, Undertale isn't perfect, it has errors... but it doesn't matter." :)
My favorite fact about the games code comes from the "Legends of Localization: Undertale" book provided by Fangamer. It goes over a lot of neat stuff about translations, but this book has several sections where 8-4 studios, the studio that helped translate Undertale into Japanese and port it to consoles, had to redo giant sections of the entire game and re-program parts that had nothing to do with the dialogue, because simply changing the language of the text displayed in text boxes broke ABSOLUTELY EVERYTHING
Download GameMaker over at gamemaker.io/en or else
I already have 😈😈
I expected some kind of a referral link, but it's actually clean??? That's a miracle :3
OR ELSE?! WHY IS THERE AN OR ELSE?!
This is the most fitting sponsor i have ever seen. I literal unskipped on SponsorBlock to watch it. Swag.
I love gameMaker 💖
if i remember correctly Toby actually got the genocide game delete to work. but he removed it since windows detected it as a virus 💀
@@ACoffiend LOL even better
Well, that sucks. That would've been better. But noooo. Windows has to be a crybaby and complain about everything. "Oh my god! A game is uninstalling itself? I gotta fucking remove this virus!" @JuniperDev
@@jarielwilliams9856 That's intended behavior, and should never ever change. A program uninstalling itself without the control of a user is malware behavior, regardless of the source and intention. If Microsoft ever allowed this, it would create a ton of security vulnerabilities. I agree, it would've been funny and scary, but there's a limit you have to not pass if you want your game to still be considered a game in front of the OS's eyes.
@@Tenandrobilgi Yeah. Fair. That is true.
@@Tenandrobilgi why can an uninstaller be allowed to uninstall a part of the pc itself then?
thats a double standard there.
Toby Fox made his game in a cave WITH A BOX OF SCRAPS
GameMaker Studio: am I a joke to you?
I'm sorry...I'm not Toby Fox
he only had 2 sticks and a rock, and he HAD TO SHARE THE ROCK (with temmie)
And on hussie basement, the creator from homestuck, no wonder the game is called UNDERtale
Tony Fox?
"Undertale is poorly programmed" Canonically it was made by a dog barking into a speech to text converter, so that checks out
yeah it really does
Beautiful
Not canonically
It's just a joke Easter egg
@@narrativeless404 it’s literally canon. The annoying dog is canonically God.
@@libsh5684 No it's not
It's never stated
An easter egg telling a Dog made a game by barking into a typewriter doesn't mean that's how Undertale uniberse came to be
Quit simping!
Honestly, the fact that Undertale is a poorly coded game makes Undertale even more of an inspiration. If even a rookie developer can make such a fantastic game, then you can too!
That’s kinda why I use it as inspiration too. Kinda what made me ever consider if I want to learn to make video games. I probably won’t ever be able to make a full project, but I can dream!
not in my case, because i know i can do worse than toby fox in 2013 with 50k
@@ssg-eggunner if you feel you can't do what Toby did, just try a smaller scope! Find something that you feel you can do by yourself and just do it! Even if it never sees the light of day, you'll have a blast!
@@AnimatingBeats you don't have to start with a full proejct!! Toby started with ROM hacks, UniqueGeese started with a Garten of Banban remake, you can start with a small scope, like a 10-minute to 1 hour-long game. Once you feel comfortable doing stuff like that, you can dream bigger! It's better to have a complete small project than an incomplete big one!
@@Wince_Media i could do a ripoff of pong and i still can imagine it crashing
"If you like quirky characters and inconsistent pixel lengths, Undertale is for you." - Toby Fox, 2015
@mrwilsonisofflinegape577 true insanity IRL 🦕🦕🦕
@mrwilsonisofflinegape577 Buddy, Metal Gear Rising is almost 11 years old and it still gets talked about today. If we go even older than that we have Ocarina of Time or Doom, or Minecraft.
Hello pfp twin
I HATE inconsistent pixel lengths with a burning passion... but I still somehow managed to get through Undertale without rupturing a hernia. Who knows how.
@@altmycelium1 No way......
this is just how people code. if its not held together with spaghetti and tape, are you really even a developer?
Hahah! I laughed too hard at this. I diligently start every project with absolute star level folder and consistency. A week into the code base. I realize star level means you can pick a star in the sky and I’ve probably put a bit of glue, duct tape and code in it. 😂😂
It's called "modular design"
By which I mean I grabbed a bunch of hastily-coded, self-contained functions and stitched them together as needed.
And plagiarized as much open source as I could get away with.
@@NotAGoodUsername360 Haha! The three of us are on our way to becoming a AAA Studio! Heh heh heh!
literally running on Hopes and Dreams
1:57 I think the genocide route we ended up getting is actually more meaningful than if the game was deleted. To me the true "canon" ending of undertale is the post-genocide pacifist run were you trying to redeem yourself for the horrible things you've done only to see that your soul has been irreversibly tainted and you can never have your happy ending again.
the WRITING is genius
the code on the other hand is held together by sticks, duct tape and a prayer.
so basically a normal computer program.
well we gotta remembner this guy was basically one man with $50k
correction: and hopes and dreams :)
that was one EPIC prayer.
@@Thatmoosecaishen he spend 50k more wisely than a certain other guy recently
Yeahhhhh Undertale is held together by a bunch of sticks and glue 😅it's honestly kind of miraculous that it not only works, but also that most playthroughs really don't see many glaring bugs at all
MYSTIC! You have been all over my feed while I've been making this video haha. Seriously, creators like you are a big reason the community behind this game is still thriving and videos like mine are still interesting to people. Kudos!!
You forgot determination, loot and loots of determination.
Not as bad as tf2
That spaghetti code is barely tied together there
It's like old Pokémon games
This is how most coding projects work, or at least mine.
1:35 that's og oneshot, modern oneshot allows you to close the game but scolds you for it by saying it scares Niko as they're alone and dark when the window closes
One of my favorite things about Undertale is how, with Toby's limited skills and technical crap, it's still one of the best games I've ever played
I actually like how it's "badly coded"
Old games had bad code too and Undertale is meant to replicate those games
similar to Minecraft in a way, at least for redstone. Fun fact: turning off a 3 block long redstone wire causes over 1700 block updates.
@@vibaj16no wonder why my world is lagging like heck lol
@@SMCwasTaken at the same time though a lot of those games were sort of ingenious if you think about how much memory and space they took up like literal MBs of info which to me I think is awesome, like we laugh at how janky they are but a lot of those were written with basically assembly which is definitely pretty awesome
@@SMCwasTaken tbf, none of those games intended to have bad code, including Undertale. 😂
_Reads title._
_Gets pitchfork._
_Watches video._
_Lowers pitchfork._ "Good point."
REAL
_Reads title._
_Reads the first two sentences of the description._
_Lowers pitchfork._
So relatable.
Accurate. Except I wasn’t gonna bring a pitchfork. I was gonna bring a machine gun. Get Ralsei to wield it. Stuff like that
im lowering my pitchfork but im not happy about it
To be fair, undertale was made ONLY BY HIM (when we talk about code), and even so the game came out working good, no lag, no bugs (except if you want to make one), etc.
That's the reason why deltarune is making more faster than undertale and looking better in code because toby get better, game maker upgrade his system and there's more people working on it.
Fun fact: one of the few reasons why the game don't deleated himself in the final version is because in some places a game where you have to pay but gets deleted by his own is ilegal.
7:45
3:01 fun fact: I saw on a yt video about unused undertale content that this flowey sprite was gonna be used if you manage to oneshot Asgore by hacking the game
@@FireCo0kie-0fficial Oooh that's super interesting lol!!
100 yard stare lookin flowey
"..."
"..."
"...uhh, you win?"
That would’ve been hella funny
"Jeez..."
"...And i thought I'M the bad guy here."
4:00 to be fair, Toby used to be an Earthbound rom hacker, and Earthbound is pretty much infamous for how overtly complicated it's text system was
Earthbound, that came in the SNES. So that explains a lot
a switch statement isn't inefficient memory-wise, it may be even faster than a file you read whenever you need data.
that's what i was thinking, the I/O solution sounds like it would take way longer
@@BlueBoyTech yeah, for it to be faster one needs to load the file into memory and then map every entry to an array, which would be the same as a switch statement (maybe a little more organized). However, when it comes to Undertale.. it doesn't really matter
no it is. but also.. that's not the problem. the problem was that everytime he wanted to add more dialogue, he'd have to string together multiple codes to get it working.
in a proper npc system you would just write the dialogue and the game would read it.
It's still a bad solution. If you wanted to actually get the speed advantage of using memory instead of reading from a file, you would use the file, but load its content into a lookup table/map in memory.
Then you could just access each dialogue section with a key like "sans-intro" or "toriel-boss-start"
@@BlueBoyTech A separate config file for dialog is really useful for localization specifically, as you can switch out the file for different translations.
oh hey, i'm in this!! thanks for the shoutout
@@ShayyTV Yooo!! Neat seeing you here! That makes a lot of sense bahahah, I was debating between showing a couple areas that seemed to have the gag surrounding conveyer belts. I appreciate the clarification!
i literally called it that shayy was going to be in the comments lmao
ah yes the room with the really quiet easter egg
Riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiing
Hi Shay I love your content
5:00 For your knowledge: Computers are really fast at everything. Going through thousands of statements does not require a lot of computing power, however if that is done every frame (which it isn't here) it could take away crucial computing power from other tasks.
So, Toby's approach is dubious, but ultimately fine.
Interestingly, the switch statement would theoretically be the best solution if you could design it in a jump table statement, where every single condition gets assigned a number and the code is spread out in a massive array, the number corresponding to the array position of the code. This would make it O(1).
But yeah, sometimes you want to keep it simple, it is not an area where performance matters at all.
@@briannormant3622 in a compiled language yeah, but I think gamemaker has its own interpreted language or something. It's a mystery to me how it handles switch statements.
really, i think the only reason that such an approach is frowned upon is that it makes localization harder, since if the dialogue is stored externally, localizing the text to another language is just a matter of replacing it, whereas baking the dialogue into the executable like that means that translating the game's text to another language requires you to recompile the game entirely
@@briannormant3622 _technically_, the default way to make a jump table - as the name implies - requires an extra layer of indirection from an array. as the array/table that's built gets you "the direction to jump to to run the code there", not "the dialogue data itself". as long as dialogue data is always the same (and there isn't some extra preparation code for some special dialogues) an actual array would be faster. unless the compiler realizes the data is the same and makes a genuine array as a second optimization
that being said i doubt GML even makes a jump table in the first place
You must never have used the laptop I did A level computer science on
4:47 Minor correction: Unlike a list of if statements, where you run the dialogue ID through X amount of statements one after the other. Switch statements, on the other hand, use a hashlist that tells the game what part of the program to jump to in order to execute the right code.
Like it's a messy blob function that could be written in a more coherent way, but coming from a background of backend development, I've sort of just accepted that there are some situations where you will just have blobby code, and game design is one of those cases.
So it's less "slow", and more "a visual affront to god"
Depends on the interpreter, but most languages implement these kinds of switch statements w/ subroutine lookup tables...
If you can't follow a switch statement you are a bad programmer, fight me.
I mean kudos to Undertale that as far as I can recall there aren’t really instances of id mismatch between triggers and dialogue output, but being the one to take a fine tooth comb to that hell blob probably took as much time as making a readable version of the tool would have.
Like I’d straight up be mad if someone asked for a code review and showed me a 10k line switch case.
The "Fun Value" thing should be in more games. It adds variety to different playthroughs with minimal effort from the developer
Awesome video btw
Can any coders tell us if this would be hard to add to games?
@@rakesiar not really just create a random value on new game and check if the value is below or above something and then do the thing u actually want to happen which is the hardest part
@@rakesiarSoftware engineer / game dev here: It’s actually pretty easy, the only hard part would be coding all the unique events (and that’s more of a content creation task).
It’s as simple as doing something like:
int funValue = Math.Rand(1,100)
if (funValue > 57)
{
//add code for an event that will only happen if the fun value is greater than 57
}
I think a lot of games tend to avoid this because they don’t like players to have a very randomized experience. It only works for certain types of games where it doesn’t harm the gameplay, otherwise it can be kinda annoying.
@@rakesiar Not particularly, just adding the feature would be extremely easy, the hard part would be adding the various possible events, and that would scale linearly with how many there are.
THE UNDERTALE DIALOGUE "IF" STATEMENT
Oh god no
Lord o me may code Jesus (so basically brackeys before he quit) save me
terrifying
still better yandere sim game spaghetti code
Switch is not an if statement
Wow your channel is awesome! How did youtube not recommend this to me earlier? Keep it up!
Dude thank you so much!! (:
@@JuniperDev Your channel is truly awesome! But I wish the title of this video didn't make a bad first impression of it. :P
There are two routes of spaghetti:
Toby Fox
YandereDev
Nuff said
At least Toby bothered using switch statements
@@squid_cake haha yes
chaotic good and chaotic neutral
And Papyrus
@@Hyperboidneutral???
Games nowadays don't have enough dogs you can pet.
@@bananaman9869 So true
Minecraft legend does
Or just animals to pet in general
ugh
That is a huge pet peve of mine
Undertale is a roomba with a razor taped to it.
Good enough.
Why does this sound like a genuine Hazzard
Stabby's cousin
CLEAN RUSSEL!
wtf why was “razor” blue with a little magnifying glass but now its not?
@@Lego_Trunks460it’s some stupid feature that youtube implemented
You should change the "Written" in the title to "Programmed", "Coded", "Developed" or "Designed", it'd still be plenty eyecatching for the youtube algorithm and wouldn't send people to just dislike and then click off which would tank the video and stop UA-cam from recommending it. But yeah I agree it's interesting how a game as great as undertale looks like it was just programmed on a napkin by a drunkard with a crayon behind the scenes.
Perhaps something more creative and eye-catching than even that, like "Undertale's code is spaghetti" with Papyrus' shocked face as the thumbnail.
The point is that she may have done it on purpose to get more views
@@SamBateman Leave the title but have foreshadowing with just Papyrus pogging at a plate of speghetti with no words.
@@SamBateman Honestly could work, messy code is often called "spaghetti code" so there'd be plenty of space for some Papyrus jokes.
@@sumas7 Yeah but it's short sighted, a title like the ones I suggested would still grab attention and get views without attracting angry mobs. Besides that is just a safer bet, if too many viewers dislike the video at its release window it gets butchered in the algorithm and UA-cam simply won't recommend it.
the thing holding it all together is some tape and DETERMINATION
And Papyrus‘ spaghetti of course
1:22 just want to add that this for those who haven’t played the game: this is only true in the original version, not the modern one on steam and world machine edition
Yeah, I remember the heartbound dev saying that you "don't need to be a good game dev to make a great game" in a shorts and using Undertale as example, so I actually didn't get clickbaited (Also, there is a code behind sans so...)
Sounds like it conflates game dev with just the technical side of game dev, neglecting the artistic side which is all about designing an experience for the player.
read the title. grabbed my pitchfork. then watched for a few seconds and realized: "yeah the code is just papyrus' spaghetti" and then put my pitchfork away
Papyrus'S
@@animainmilol *Papyrus'
@@stuckatthevalley both are valid
@@vibaj16no. if you have a name that ends with S, you don’t put another S when referring to something that belongs to the person with the name ending with S, so it’s just papyrus’
Papyru's
4:51 As far as I know, using switch is faster than using if, yes, the code reads worse, but internally the compiler makes optimizations that make it much faster, using a CSV you first have to read the file and I suppose you will load it in a map, which I think is a little slower than a defined switch, although they are small things that practically do not affect the performance of the game.
1:17 Thankfully this only happens in an old version, the steam version just has niko confused when you relog into the game
I would’ve been traumatized if this happened when I played it 😭😭😭😭😭😭
So THAT’S why Deltarune Ch.3 is taking so long
Well, actually the opposite, cause toby now has other people working on the game so he has to make it more readable
I can’t wait for the Woody fight
Deltarune is a pretty large step up from Undertale, so that means that the code has to be written cleaner so the game can actually work. Also he has a team now so the code has to be readable if they want to work on the game.
@@soapgaming4903 yes I know this is sarcasm
@@illegalmemedealer3549 whoops. Looks like I need to work on my literary skills lol.
Toby Fox is what Yandere Dev wish he could be, but isn't.
I know you are going for a rage bait title but I strongly recommend you to change it. You don't want to meet a certain side of the fandom
Exactly. Why rage bait? Doesn’t end well usually.
and this one's especially too strong that even people outside the fandom to get startled ngl
@@THGMR-ox7sdit gets views, let’s be honest we all clicked because of the title
The game is like 10 years old I don't think those kinda people are around anymore
@@Kosta991 i love how that age's a year away from not being a hyperbole
I disagree about the illusion of choice. When done correctly, it's a very useful tool that gives the player some sense of agency without spiraling off exponentially with every decision made. Plus having multiple paths to the same outcome is just realistic.
Plus all you need to do is throw in some real choices, and then now the player doesn't know if the choice will matter or not.
You do want a common experience between players. Not exactly the same experience, but they need to feel like they're playing the same game. And, for completionists, it needs to achievable to see all the content.
I think that's what Toby wants to do with Deltarune, since, you know, your choices don't matter. The last chapter will probably happen during the roaring, since I can't imagine any possible outcome of snowgrave
I actually really like when this is done in a way where the choices lead to very different dialog/scenes that eventually lead to the same outcome. Even if the overall story is the same, it feels unique enough to have a new experience
The main problem with illusion of choice is when there's literally zero depth to it. Instead of adding flavor it just brings extra attention to the fact that you have no agency.
At least give *some* detour before joining back to the main route instead of "yes/no" ">no" "haha you don't mean that" "yes/no"
This video is awesome at explaining it, ive heard thor talk about this in particular during a stream and you just summed it up keep making these videos!
Thor = pirate software
More accurate, and less clickbaity to say "Undertale is a horribly coded game" because everyone either knows that's true or would be interested to learn more about. (As a modder, it _is_ questionably programmed... Well, at least I was able to make plenty of progress on my Bug Fables mod of Undertale!)
Bug fables mentioned 🗣️🗣️🔥🔥🔥🔥
I saw "Dev" in your name and immediately knew it was going to be about the code lol
1:01 Regarding that, maybe he should use a list of file names and a loop that goes through all of these file names to shorten the code.
extraordinarily rare oneshot mention in a random video
the 2016 remake of oneshot doesn't do anything as extreme as deleting the entire game though, but it does do something similar by restricting your access to the rest of the game until your delete your save file or solving the puzzle related to it
though OneShot becomes literal in the 2014 version as mentioned. however, there are versions where you get more than one attempt at the game
My experience messing around Undertale's code is when me and another guy working on technical stuff for an Undertale localization project, the other dude noticed me about a problem that when a player walk through Alphys's lab, they sometime got lag and even game crash. The reason for that is because of the screen displayer (that display Frisk's face) works by deleting and generating a sprite from the main surface (that draw everything inside the room) every single step, using function sprite_create_from_screen_x, which is sprite_create_from_surface but with application_surface. We have to modified the code to use surface_copy_part and the result is like day and night. There are more funny stuff we found inside the code but this one is the one I remembered the most.
So basically the entirety of undertale’s dialogue is controlled by a scratch if _ then _ block
well that's just an if else loop.
I want to point out a few things:
1. Game optimization does matter. However, it's importance depends on what kind of a game you are making.
2. Switch statement are not inefficient. Inefficient is what's called an if ladder, because it will check conditions one by one. Switch statement are designed to determine what code should be executed in almost constant time. That's why it only accepts constant values as cases. So it's not that bad.
You're right that this is likely more efficient than a collection of equivalent If-Else Blocks but that's also not the alternative anyone should be shooting for.
Switch statements are also not necessarily better than If-Else Blocks all the time. Switch statements frontload the condition checking, requiring a condition that accounts for all cases at once. If-Else blocks allow you to Shortcircuit the comparisons by putting the most common cases first, allowing you to skip the check for other cases in those situations. In short, you want to use Switch statements if all of the options share an easy to create and calculate condition, and If-Else blocks if there's not a whole lot of conditions or you could benefit from the shortcircuiting in most cases.
Once you're looking at 50 or more cases, I personally think it's time to start considering another solution. I can't actually imagine everything that Switch statement has to consider in its condition to determine what case to go to every time. It would sound like time to use a data structure that organizes your data appropriately. Even just using an array and a collection of flags set as relevant events are triggered, and that can be easily combined via simple arithmetic to create the index, could be a cleaner solution. You would even be able to make multiple arrays like an NPC dialogue array, a story event array, a phone call array, and you could potentially further divide them by the areas they take place in If desired so that you don't have to load the array that contains the very first line of dialogue in the game into memory when you're in the Hotlands.
@RedOphiuchus I agree. this is definitely a bad design both for maintenance and performance. At least he was not making a raytraced sandbox game from scratch...
We could definitely set the compiler to unroll it into an if/else nightmare though.
Two very important things:
- Undertale is graphically good. The vast majority of visual assets seen in the game were cleaned up considerably by Temmie, produced from scratch by her, or done by another artist Toby hired. The entirety of Home, Snowdin, and many other areas were not only drawn and sprited entirely by Temmie, but even conceived in concept art by her first via fairly vague instructions from Toby. It is not an exaggeration to say Temmie is more important to Undertale's identity at many points in the game than Toby is.
There was a strong effort to keep the look simple and reminiscent enough of what Toby himself would doodle, but most of the final product is by no means not a professional quality finish, nor something he could produce anything that feels remotely similar to.
This confuses a lot of aspiring gamedevs into thinking they can still achieve what Undertale did with lower standards/ability. They cannot.
-Toby's lack of ability to code his way out of a "Hello world" assignment is one of the many factors delaying Deltarune to year infinity. It is very much an issue and, much like the point above, should not be something that encourages aspiring game devs to skip over learning their fundies.
Toby has been notably trying to use Temmie less on Deltarune also, and development and the product itself is suffering for that as well.
I didn't know these facts, and I'm glad I now do. Thank you for making this comment ^^
really nice points.
Wait, why isn't he working with her as much anymore?
@@annagolikova5167 I'm honestly not sure. He mentioned in the 2022 commentary stream that he wants to be able to do as much of the visuals himself as he possibly can, but then he started simply giving more work to Gigi that would have gone to Temmie in Undertale.
It's hard to figure out how he is thinking.
Had he given Temmie the same role and freedom she had on Undertale, getting everything done for the game on the visual asset and design side would be done practically overnight with how good Temmie is these days. Maybe she simply charges too much now.
Question: I can see how the development would be suffering due to the lack of involvement of Tem. But why the product, too? Is there something from the already-released Deltarune chapters that bothered you and that you think clearly shows a downgrade from Undertale? Just to be clear, I'm not trying to criticize you, I am legitimately curious.
Toby is the type of
guy who will refuse havard because his result was too good
Yeah, Undertale is a cheap game. But it’s not cheap in its heart, literally. So much will and emotion is put into every corner of it. Honestly, it being so simple in its controls helps it’s worth blossom MORE, because the game is about subversive storytelling. It’s saying that beauty can be found in anything, and in anyone. And it’s up to you to give it that chance, and you do that so many times in the game that it eventually feels instinctual to the player. It gives someone good values without them even knowing it.
"Undertale" (and by extension, what it says about Fox) is the _Ratatouille_ of indie games.
"A great artist can come from anywhere."
"Undertale is a horribly coded game" could have gotten the point across better, but what do I know? I still clicked on the video 💀
Yeahh but honestly that title made me avoid this video for a while bc it was so glaringly obvious that it was a clickbait. Im only here because UA-cam kept shoving this video into my recommended and I got tired of it
Title's meant to be clickbait for angry UT fans looking for a fight.
Hence the issue. It's a clickbait title mostly just saying stuff we already knew.
@@Enuocale Opinion moment, most people think the games is amazing, you dont lol. But to be fair there is no game that is for everyone.
@@scizorscyther694 i don't think they meant to diss the game, they (maybe) thought that undertale having funi coding practices is common knowledge :P (especially thanks to the piratesoftware short that got quite popular recently)
About the OneShot closing thing, that’s kind of for the Freeware version on itch, the newer Steam version (and now Switch version) made it so it just saves your game to stop giving people figurative (and hopefully not literal) heart attacks.
Just a casual OneShot fan here, thought I’d simply say something. But this video is honestly surprisingly neat, and Undertale sounds like a NIGHTMARE for Toby to have made- Yet he did it anywhere because why not.
When I read the title, I knew exactly what you were talking about
Toby even added a reference to this in Deltarune with the Spaghetti Code item
I think the spaghetti code item is a more broad reference to jank programming, spaghetti code is a common term.
I think I remember Toby hinting multiple times that coding is a slog for him.
-It works?
-yes...
-so?
programmer philosophy 101.
Watch it bite your ass one year later@@MarcosAlexandre-no3qx
Look at Yandere Dev and say that again
@@minxxxyagami unlike the 5k polygon toothbrush game, Undertale works just fine
@@minxxxyagami 2 words
"it works?"
the fact that this game is so good despite most of it being held together by hopes, prayers, and a 1000 case switch statement
I feel the need to clarify that larger switch statements do NOT impact performance. No matter how large the switch statement is, it will always take the same amount of time for the game to figure out which set of instructions need to be referred to -- effectively, they are the O(1) alternative to having a bunch of separate if statements.
I will agree, Toby's method of handling dialogue events may seem kind of odd, but ultimately it looks more like a preferential thing to me. It seems like he was more fond of keeping everything in one place so that he could refer to different in-game events easier, instead of having to look in multiple different places around the game. That's just what I personally believe, though.
@@dracobot1223 My understanding is that the operating time depends on the compiler; you are correct that many languages do port those statements into a jump table automatically, making it o(1), but not all do. So without optimization generally o(n). And if it's thousands of cases, that optimization may be a binary search, so logn.
I could definitely do some more thinking about that one and you definitely got me double checking. I appreciate your comment! 🍃
@@JuniperDev I think the main problem is even worse case scenario the switch statement is still faster than loading and processing a csv file.
On a good compiler, you would be correct, but gamemaker studio uses an interpreted language. It's proprietary, so you can't know for certain but it probably does not do many optimisations, so it will still be O(n). In the end, it doesn't matter since computers are fast enough that you can do thousands of comparisons per second. I just checked in python, known for being slow, and it does 1,000,000 comparisons in 43 ms.
@@santania4719 Worst case scenario you need to write your own jump table and an interpreter so you can read the instructions that you're jumping to.
Whoops! I meant to reply to someone else, still should show for everybody I think, but sorry that it looks like I'm replying to your entirely different comment.
@@JuniperDev Interestingly, I've just learned that switch statements in GameMaker may have not always compiled the same way. I remember getting an error when attempting to supply a non-constant in the case argument field, which led me to believe that switch statements were compiled as jump tables. It seems that this is no longer the case..?
I'm not fully certain what this means in the context of the version of GameMaker that Toby used, either.
For now I will say that I may have been the one spreading misinformation here, LOL.
Why on earth do people think switch for dialogue is slow?
It's literally supposed to be faster than loading text from a disk and using a hashmap for dispatch.
Because most coders don't think about what the processor does to do to make their program happen. It's ugly so it's bad, and because it's bad it must be slow.
It may certainly be faster, but it sure seems way less maintainable. Like, if I had to add some extra dialogue for a new event into that statement, it feels like it'd be pretty difficult.
I could be wrong, though. As I type this, I can imagine organizing the switch using some sort of standardized variable, making a new state for that variable, and then adding the line. Hm.
@@domojestic4155 You'd keep your dialogue and event IDs in a database and have a tool that automatically converts it to the switch statements or hashmap just before compilation. Ideally, you'd make proper scenario tools that handle all the optimization automatically.
It's not that it's slow (it can be slow), but it's the kind of system that if something breaks, it'll take you a few hours to fix. Or it's a lot harder to keep working as you expand the complexity of the script. It's slow in the way you develop, not necessarily how it executes at runtime.
@@domojestic4155 For sure, but also, he's the only one in there. In a larger production it would be a problem, but if he's the only one being a gremlin in his own code, then it is better and more "efficient" for it to make sense to him first and foremost. I feel like cleanliness is sometimes a bit of an arbitrary gold standard, especially in games (and especially especially with indie games) where building super robust systems is sometimes more work than it's worth in the end, or it would require a lot of backtracking to fix everything, re-break everything to re-build everything better... If you decide the experience matters more than the quality of the skeleton underneath (which imo should always be the way to go as a gamedev), then vOv
In Toby's defense, it probably was hard to code using while having paws for hands and hitting teenagers with a jacks-pacific car.
I remember that instead of figuring out any type of real pathing system or fixing several boundary issues, there's several Out of Bounds areas in Undertale that have "magic glass" (his words) that appears when you or Undyne walk on it. It's like instead of being able to get rid of a bug, he put a clown nose on it instead and said, "See, now it's a funny joke and not irritating at all!" and went to do something else.
I sometimes wonder how the game would look if he knew beforehand just how popular Undertale would become.
this is honestly extremely encouraging. i want to get into game design but have found it challenging to approach and this video honestly made it seem better. just jump into it, doesnt matter if youre perfect. an unprofessional random guy did it pretty inefficiently and now its one of the most beloved games ever
Loved this video essay, if you make more of these trust that I'll be watching the whole way through. Super comfy watch, intriguing and informative. Earned a sub, guud shit.
i gasped at the dialogue being one if statement, oh my god
Thing is, it's not even true
@@crypt5129for real this python fiends never touched C in their life.
If you think Undertale's dialogue being one giant switch statement is bad, look at VVVVVV. %90 of THE GAME (yes, the ENTIRE game) is one giant switch case statement
WHAT
@@minestar2247I've been seeing you a lot recently.
You're now one of the commenters. I see frequently.
It's interesting how you keep reading you to comment sections and you keep finding familiar faces.
ong
why are the best games so horribly coded
im crying what
This very much reminds me of Thee Sims 2. It’s in my (and many other people’s) opinion the best Sims game to date, yet the code is so awful, that you have to jump through hoops _not_ to completely break the game beyond repair. Like, certain buttons in the game that you’re supposed to use will just break. Say you try to export a lot that Sims have lived in, the whole game has a chance of breaking because now there’s missing data and it’s just a beautiful mess of a game.
Sounds like Sonic 06 and Fnaf: Security Breach...
IneedSims2brokengamesareMyfavoritegames!!!!
@@lunarskys2645 Be careful, if you want to mess around with breaking the game, go ahead, but you may not be able to open it if it gets too messed up. The broken faces could be fun to play with, though.
4:30 Excuse me, but isn't switch statement very efficient so it will jump into a certain place in a constant time no matter how many cases there are?
From what I have seen in this video, I guess dialogs in the game work in a way that when an event that causes a dialog happens, the event asks a global switch statement to handle a number the event was given in advance. For example, the player hits an object, so the object requests the global switch statement to handle the object's pre-made number.
In such a way the dialog shouldn't be inefficient, am I wrong?
Robtop is hiding under his desk begging not to be found after this video came out...
The twd video essay:
He broke the ramp jump system ever since 2.2 came out... Which made some lvls impossible such as windy landscape
3:57 I've seen enough Scratch projects (Scratch doesn't even HAVE switch statements. I've seen nested ifelses that go on for MILES) to know that it could be worse
I was honestly hoping this was actually about the story because I wanted to see what unique standpoints would be given for a criticism of the game.
Was he trying to delete the game from the game's own code or something? That's not a great way to do it. Spawn and use a separate process. Write an EXE to temp that kills the game and then deletes it. Or, if you want no traces of the game left, launch the game uninstaller in silent mode, and close out the game before it starts.
Sure, you can possibly figure out a way to delete the actual files out from under you, if you know how to keep the game in memory while the files are removed. (Or if you're using Linux, which automatically handle this). But it's so easy for things to go wrong. Far better to separate things out.
Of course, maybe the tool he used can't spawn new processes?
Nice, I was disappointed that there was no explanation for how to be could have done it in the video
Thank you for this
GameMaker by default won't let you spawn any process you wish to. You can make extensions that let you do that, though
@@Mizu2023 I didn't know that
For the code to be running, wouldn't it already be in RAM? So it wouldn't need to worry about that?
Also, another comment said that he did actually get it to work, but Windows detected it as a virus.
@@vibaj16 Like I said, it's not impossible to delete something while it's running. But it can be tricky. Running programs are often locked, to prevent other programs from messing with them while running.
That idea that it was detected as a virus makes sense. It was trying to delete itself while it was still running. That's something viruses often do, to try and hide themselves.
I'm not at all saying it can't be done. Just that it's attempting to do it in hard mode.
Good to see you’re still making content! Been following you on tiktok for a minute
Remember kids, you dont have to be good, just good enough
This doesn't make any sense
This doesn't make any sense
True that
"Undertale is a horribly coded game" wouldn't hit as hard as written
YEAH that's what I'm sayiiiin man but hey, I do feel bad for possibly clickbaiting people D:
@@JuniperDev you clickbaited me
i legit thought you were gonna hate on Undertale as a whole
@@JuniperDevyou should change the title if you feel bad :/.
@@JuniperDev I was already loading my dislike shotgun
@@1th_to_comment. NOT THE DISLIKE SHOTGUN-
This is honestly inspiring, even though I don't have plans to seriously dev and release any games I've done stuff for fun and I always feel anxious about how bad my code must be because I really only know the basics and know nothing about optimization. Really inspiring knowing that one of the most beloved games is awfully coded.
Don't focus on memorizing stuff. It's all written down for you, and programming languages evolve and change all the time.
There's always a more efficient way to write something.
I'd just focus programming. Have your manual next to you, and have Stack Overflow and Reddit open.
Everything from its programming to the music to the dialogue was unorthodox, that’s what makes undertale so great. Toby went and did everything you aren’t supposed to do with a game, especially something like RPGs and made it into a game and IT WORKED.
5:30
Ah, the classic "I could program this object to be able to move with another object and spend hours debugging that, or I can fake the same thing through weaponized code jank because this is literally the only time I need it to move like this".
Great video! good humor and very cool message. Ive had lots of experiences with working on different art forms (games, film, etc..) where people judge for not having an education in it but it really doesn't mean you cant make something good.
8:18 Calling game maker free nowadays is like calling mushrooms a fruit.
You can make web based games but that's it. They removed free Windows game development. That's paywall content unless you have the old version unlocked and installed before the switch.
What is a "web based"
game,can you explain?
@@Moruk_Doruk When you test or wanna export a game, unless you get the full version it will only be openable in your browser.
@@Solesteam Oh ok👍
6:56 omori does that wich is why I wondered why I saw Mari once and not again in a different play through
This video title worked so well. I have never seen any of your videos and yet I sat through this whole video just based on that title
I agree with Mr. Fox on the last bit. Hades is only good because you can pet Cerberus.
The title almost gave me an heart attack lol
):< how dare you 0:02
Somebody is angy
As a programmer, I believe that what someone's code looks like is dependent on how their brain works. If it was easier for Toby to interpret one massive switch statement then so be it. Sometimes understanding is a lot more important than efficiency.
only if you are the sole developer. if you arent, you need to conform.
Undertale has spaghetti code... boom. the title doesn't trigger my fight or flight response
4:45 - This is actually the most efficient (from a performance standpoint) way to add dialogue variability. In a program, in any case, everything comes down to if-else. The only difference is how many layers of wrappers there will be - one in the form of a switch-case or 5-20 in the form of objects
Is this what all this "Hopes And Dreams" is all about?
Oh thank god
I saw the title and I was getting worried I would have to summon Franklin again
whos franklin😨
Lol your own game that you show at the end for the sponsor looks so good for a second game. It looks incredibly charming, well done!
2:46 toby wanted every piece of art to be consistent, just as crappy as all of them.
Real. You ain't gotta code good to make a 10/10 all-timer. Make games!
...And this is why I'll probably never be able to make that game I wanna make. Gosh... It's kinda demotivating, honestly. As much as I WANT to make that concept, I'm not in the position that Toby was in. I don't have anyone to contact for help, really... And I'd have to make everything from scratch, despite not knowing how to code and being a mediocre sprite artist at best. (I'm also okay at music!) All in all... I uh... Wow I really wish I was just a bit more... Talented, ya know? Cause' despite everything I've achieved lately... I dunno. I just don't think I'll be able to overcome this one... But I'm definitely subscribing though, ya deserve it. (Sorry about the depressing tangent btw.)
@@Finleys_snek DUDE!! I feel you, but I think you are a lot more similar to Toby than you think. Game development isn't exactly a "talent", but more of a skill you practice and get better at over time. Even T man started somewhere. I haven't even released a game yet because I still have so far to go until my games are up to the standard I'll be proud of. But it's inevitable to get there someday, and the time will pass anyways (:
@@JuniperDev Well... Okay admittedly I do have quite a bit in common with him. (I might as well be Toby Fox ordered off of wish.) I certainly do appreciate the encouragement as well! But I dunno... I think the concept I have in mind is just... A bit too complex for my first project. (It's like... A LOT.)
She actually has a point, PUT DOWN THE PITCHFORKS
No
@@Mr.innocence666why?
Nope! That woman will suffer the CONSEQUENCES.
wait why
I won‘t put down my pitchfork, but I‘ll put down my Meowmere
This is the equivalent to some stickman carrying a Statue of Liberty.
Ive been wanting to see a video on this since I saw PirateSoftware making a short on all the text being in a single switch statement
This video is not what I thought it was. I thought it was about Toby being a bad NARRATIVE writer. The video itself is fine, but you might want to change the title to “Undertale is poorly coded” instead. Cool video though.
Poorly _-made,_ not poorly _-written._
7:38 deltarune chapter 1: 😰
Subscribed after just viewing this. I like learning about the amount of expert or amateur effort put into gaming code. One day I shall do the same, for a rather disregarded genre.
I've heard that Toby was inspired by the Shin Megami Tensei series, it's where he got the idea for the talking to enemies especially, and that series is also has a good amount of code fuckery like accidentally making a boss a debug enemy with only 2 attacks, having a stat that does almost nothing, having magic damage thst decreases as you level, forgetting to compress layouts and having an underflow glitch where you can't increase your agility past like 27
Toby's other major gamedev experience before Undertale was the Halloween Hack, which is made on Earthbound, a game infamous for its horrific code. I can't include links in youtube comments, but if you're interested, look if you can find Mato's article about how the dialog system works in Earthbound, it's absolutely bonkers.
toby literally did all this in his room all by him self, not surprise it is
It’s so inspiring to see someone make such an amazing game on their own (+ an artist) with a free program.
Really goes to show it’s not the things you use to make something, but how *you* make it.
I love how the title of the video makes it seem like it will give you a heart attack when in the end it's just about:
"OK, Undertale isn't perfect, it has errors... but it doesn't matter." :)
10:22 - Toby Fox’s 2 favorite words…
*P E T D O G S*
My favorite fact about the games code comes from the "Legends of Localization: Undertale" book provided by Fangamer. It goes over a lot of neat stuff about translations, but this book has several sections where 8-4 studios, the studio that helped translate Undertale into Japanese and port it to consoles, had to redo giant sections of the entire game and re-program parts that had nothing to do with the dialogue, because simply changing the language of the text displayed in text boxes broke ABSOLUTELY EVERYTHING