- Assad Yousuf
- Danial Yunus
- Sophia Shovkovy
- Viraj Nimmagadda
Players will navigate the character through a sea of incoming meteoroids while attempting to avoid dangerous meteors. When players land on a flaming meteor, a trivia question relating to the Psyche mission is presented and the player must answer correctly to proceed without losing a life. The game also features a study mode that cycles through the trivia questions and encourages players to learn!
The motivation behind our overall project was to create a fun and informational game that could be enjoyed by all ages. Although we made the game kid friendly, we incorporated many elements to keep things engaging for adults.
- Normal: Manuever the character through a sea of incoming meteroids. Gray meteroids are safe to progress, flaiming meteroids are dangerous! Choosing a flaming meteroid prompts a question. Answering incorrectly penalizes the player with a life lost. Answering correctly allows them to continue at no cost. Reach 200 points to complete the game!
- Time Attack: Try to beat your high score with only 60 seconds!
- Study Mode: Cycle through the question pool to learn about the Psyche mission and protect yourself from losing lives!
- Instructions: Access a quick informational graphic on how to play!
After cloning the repository, open index.html in your favorite web browser!
- Coded primarily in VSCode using the Live Server Extension.
- Uses a mix of HTML and Javascript.
- No external libraries were used in this project.
- All image assets can be found in the images directory.
- All sound assets can be found in the sound directory.
This work was created in partial fulfillment of Arizona State University Capstone Course "CSE486". The work is a result of the Psyche Student Collaborations component of NASA’s Psyche Mission (https://psyche.asu.edu). “Psyche: A Journey to a Metal World” [Contract number NNM16AA09C] is part of the NASA Discovery Program mission to solar system targets. Trade names and trademarks of ASU and NASA are used in this work for identification only. Their usage does not constitute an official endorsement, either expressed or implied, by Arizona State University or National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of ASU or NASA.