It should have been one and done. I had some respect for the bot makers the first time around for writing the code and organizing people to make big things happen in such a short time but the second year of it had the majority of pixels placed by bots from the start.
I was following it closely the first year because I thought the whole thing was so cool. Pixel bot wars isn’t very entertaining though…aside from FUCK SPEZ being so prominent
Can somebody explaine me how bots work here, if anybody needs an account? I mean I understand that you can have many accounts, but how do bots work here exactly?
If color(square[x,y]) != color(template[x,y]) then color(square[x,y]) = color(template[x,y]) else if x < max(x) then x = x+1 else x = min(x) and y = y+1 loop.
Something like this but better, with a lot of bots some of them would keep updating the same square, other would move to change other squares.
So obviously controlled by bots, what’s the point of it anymore?
It should have been one and done. I had some respect for the bot makers the first time around for writing the code and organizing people to make big things happen in such a short time but the second year of it had the majority of pixels placed by bots from the start.
I was following it closely the first year because I thought the whole thing was so cool. Pixel bot wars isn’t very entertaining though…aside from FUCK SPEZ being so prominent
Some of the bot areas are even in the same spaces as last time :|
Can somebody explaine me how bots work here, if anybody needs an account? I mean I understand that you can have many accounts, but how do bots work here exactly?
If color(square[x,y]) != color(template[x,y]) then color(square[x,y]) = color(template[x,y]) else if x < max(x) then x = x+1 else x = min(x) and y = y+1 loop.
Something like this but better, with a lot of bots some of them would keep updating the same square, other would move to change other squares.