Decorations

From Plazma Burst Official Wiki
All decorations.

Decorations are static objects that are simply made to add greater detail to levels, which cannot otherwise be replicated by the use of Walls or Backgrounds. They can easily be placed inside maps via the decoration tool. Decorations vary in size in shape, ranging from large destroyed ships, to small stones, to body-sized teleport devices.

Any decorations placed in the Plazma Burst 2 Level Editor do not come with collision, or any gameplay related properties, and must thus be added separately. Collision is added via invisible Doors, pushing and damage areas are added through Pushers, logic for teleportation must be added through Trigger actions, etc.

List of Decorations

This is a list of all decorations and their descriptions. Some decoration models aren't significant enough for their own section and have been combined with another, similar decoration. For a more basic list with each decoration's ID code, visit the old Map Editor manual page.

Stone

This is the default decoration tool. It consists of a large rock/stone type object, grey in color. There is a large version of the two stone decorations, dubbed the 'stone', and a smaller decoration, called the 'small stone'. Although the stone is non-interactive and 'covers' the player or entity that walks into it, a hitbox consisting of an invisible door can be added to the stone to make it seem like an actual hard rock. The small stone decoration is similar in shape and proportion to the stone, but is much smaller. The small stone is used in tighter locations where more stone decorations can be put, typically to avoid tackiness. Both types of the stone are fairly rare in the campaign, but in many instances, common in player-made maps.

Broken Ship

This decoration consists of a broken, crashed Falkonian Ship. There are a few instances in the campaign in which the broken ship is used, usually to indicate the presence of the Falkoks or to tie the heroes in Plazma Burst 2 to the previous game. This is one of the larger decorations. There is a similar decoration, the incoming ship once animation.

Incoming ship once animated

This decoration features a Falkonian Ship that flies a short distance and then crashes into the ground, producing an interactive and somewhat damaging explosion. This decoration marks only the area that the ship will land. After a few seconds, the decoration will send the ship crashing down into the specified area. The incoming ship is activated on the start; for it to be delayed, a nothing decoration must be converted using the decoration trigger.

Gravitator

The gravitator is a small, character-width floor device that generates sound and gives off a levitating effect. There are two forms of this decoration, the standard gravitator and the disabled gravitator. The disabled gravitator is identical in shape and size, but does not generate sound and does not give off a levitation effect. Although the gravitator itself doesn't actually lift characters up, a pusher with a negative y value can be placed above it to make it seem like the gravitator is actually doing the levitation. This decoration is found frequently throughout the campaign, exclusively used for the levitating effect.

Teleport

The teleport decorations are used to set up an organized and attractive machine that teleports players to different locations across a map. There are two types of seperate decorations used for this feature, a floor teleport, and a ceiling teleport. Both decorations are needed for the standard teleport set-up. The floor teleport consists of a character-width glowing platform that covers an area of the floor, with small, higher levels on either side. It is identical to the ceiling teleport, only mirrored. The ceiling teleport is used to cover the above section of the teleport set-up. The space in between these two decorations is where a teleport region is typically places, especially in the campaign.

Disabled Teleport

This feature is identical to the teleport in shape and size. It comes in two decorations as well, a ceiling decoration and a floor decoration. The only difference is its color. Instead of giving off a white glow color, the disabled teleport is a dark color and doesn't give off a glowing effect. This can be used to show that the teleport is disabled and cannot be used, even though the decorations themselves cannot perform the teleporting operation. This decoration is fairly rare in the campaign and custom maps.

Wide Teleport

The wide teleport is a flat teleport decoration that covers a large area of the floor. It is similar to the basic teleport in shape and design, but is larger and exclusively floor-designed, and is typically used to teleport entities in a more dramatic fashion, such as the final level in the campaign. There are two wide teleport decorations, the standard wide teleport and the disabled teleport. The standard wide teleport has a large, lit-up white area and gives off a glowing effect, while the disabled version is black and fairly colorless, and does not give off a glowing effect.

Killing Ray

The killing rays are a series of decorations consists of long, red laser beams. The killing ray is typically used as an instant-kill projection, usually for blocking off areas that a player should not be able to access. There are four kinds of killing ray decorations, identical with the exception of the direction they are facing. These include the right, left, floor, and ceiling kill rays. The killing ray decoration itself cannot kill players upon contact and is not interactive. A thin region with a very high amount of damage must be played over the decoration to get the instant-death and cutting-in-half effect.

Wall Lamps

Decorations that resemble lamps. Enabled versions emit light. Created by darkstar 1, and added to the game as part of update 1.28.

Back Lamps

Lamps with similar design to the previously mentioned wall lamps, except for the fact that they are designed to appear to be attached to the background rather than walls. Also created by darkstar 1 and added in update 1.28.

Machine

A machine with unknown purposes that has a normal and destroyed version. Also created by darkstar 1 and added in update 1.28.

Columns

Columns made from radioactive fuel rods.[1] Created by DoomWrath and added in update 1.28.

Mined barrel

Mined barrel, also known as the CS-IED, is a Civil Security manufactured improvised explosive device.[2] Also created by DoomWrath and added in update 1.28.

Pixel Door

A door that can be opened with a more complex trigger system than normal doors. It was added as part of the Star Defenders update.

Hakase

An image of Hakase from the anime/manga Nichijou. Unlike other decorations, this decor is secret and therefore hidden.

Custom Decorations

As of Version 1.32, custom images and sprites can be uploaded and approved for use as decorations in custom maps.

Nothing

This decoration does nothing. In the Advanced Level Editor, it is represented by a black X. The nothing decoration is typically used to show the effect of appearing and disappearing decorations.

References