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The '''teleport''' is a class of [[tile]] in Chip's Challenge that sends movable objects to another part of the level. When an object enters a teleport, it will exit out the next teleport of the same color on the same network if one is available. Each color teleport behaves differently when [[Chip]], [[Melinda]], a [[monster]] or another object passes through it, as described below.
The '''teleport''' is a class of [[tile]] in Chip's Challenge that sends movable objects to another part of the level. When an object enters a teleport, it will exit out the next teleport of the same color on the same network if one is available. They generally behave as sliding tiles, except in [[Lynx ruleset|Lynx]] and [[Chip's Challenge 2|CC2]], objects enter them at their normal walking speed. Each color teleport behaves differently when [[Chip]], [[Melinda]], a [[monster]] or another object passes through it, as described below.


== Blue teleport ==
== Blue teleport ==
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The '''blue teleport''', also commonly referred to as simply '''teleport''' due to being the only teleport tile in [[Chip's Challenge|Chip's Challenge 1]], is a teleport tile that sends movable objects to another part of the level. When an object enters a blue teleport, it will exit out the next teleport in reverse wrappable [[reading order]] - right to left within any row, then moving on to the right of the next row to the north, and so on - in the opposite direction, assuming this is a legal move and the [[Twice Step Glitch]] has not been activated. In one of these cases, the game will continue to search for the next teleport which allows this move. Should the search reach the northwest corner, it will start over from the southeast corner.
The '''blue teleport''', also commonly referred to as simply '''teleport''' due to being the only teleport tile in [[Chip's Challenge|Chip's Challenge 1]], is a teleport tile that sends movable objects to another part of the level. When an object enters a blue teleport, it will exit out the opposite side of the next teleport in reverse wrappable [[reading order]] - right to left within any row, then moving on to the right of the next row to the north, and so on - assuming the teleport is not covered (except in Lynx, in which case teleports behavior can be glitchy and complicated when multiple are covered), this is a legal move, and the [[Twice Step Glitch]] has not been activated. If these assumptions do not hold, the game will continue to search for the next teleport for which they do hold. Should the search reach the northwest corner, it will start over from the southeast corner.


In [[Microsoft's version of Chip's Challenge|MSCC]], if operating in black-and-white mode, the teleport appears as a white circle with a cross-shaped arrow to let the player know they can enter the teleport in any direction.
In [[Microsoft's version of Chip's Challenge|MSCC]], if operating in black-and-white mode, the teleport appears as a white circle with a cross-shaped arrow to let the player know they can enter the teleport in any direction.


Should the search reach the original teleport, it will act as a non-directional [[ice]] tile - the object will slide across it if that move is legal, or bounce back if it is not. However, a [[block]] or [[monster]] in the latter case will stick on the teleport and the teleport will cease to function. For a demonstration of this, go to [[Drawn and Quartered]], teleport directly up to the north-east room from the start, and release the fireballs into the teleport.
Should the search reach the original teleport, different things will happen, depending on the ruleset. In MS, it will act as a non-directional [[ice]] tile - the object will slide across it if that move is legal, or bounce back if it is not. However, a [[block]] or [[monster]] in the latter case will stick on the teleport and the teleport will cease to function. (For a demonstration of this, go to [[Drawn and Quartered]], teleport directly up to the north-east room from the start, and release the fireballs into the teleport.) In Lynx and CC2, if it is blocked on the other side, objects will stop on the tile and then treat it as floor. In Lynx, Chip will be stuck if he gets in this situation and the level must be restarted.


As a teleport slide is involuntary, Chip can [[Boosting|boost]] on his very next move.
As a teleport slide is involuntary in all rulesets, Chip can [[Boosting|boost]] on his very next move in MS, and the second force floor in a [[force floor]]-teleport-force floor sequence can be overridden in Lynx and CC2.


In MS, teleports beginning on the lower layer of the [[grid]] will refuse to function, and work as ice tiles just as if it redirected to itself. In [[Lynx ruleset|Lynx]], [[block]]s that start on teleports will be teleported automatically; they will teleport upwards by default, but if a [[clone block]] is used it will teleport in the direction of the clone block.
In MS, teleports beginning on the lower layer of the [[grid]] will refuse to function, and work as ice tiles just as if it redirected to itself. In Lynx, [[block]]s that start on teleports will be teleported automatically; they will teleport upwards by default, but if a [[clone block]] is used it will teleport in the clone block's direction.


In Chip's Challenge 2, blue teleports can be hooked up to [[wire]]. Wired blue teleports can only exit to other teleports on the same wire as them. If a blue teleport receives a current from any side, it will relay that current to all four sides of itself. This behavior can be used to create a circuit that splits into four directions, as a wire on [[floor]] that travels in four directions only allows the current to move horizontally or vertically.
In CC2, blue teleports can be hooked up to [[wire]]. Wired blue teleports can only exit to other teleports on the same wire as them. If a blue teleport receives a current from any side, it will relay that current to all four sides of itself. This behavior can be used to create a circuit that splits into four directions, as a wire on [[floor]] that travels in four directions only allows the current to move horizontally or vertically.
 
=== Logic Gates ===
 
<!--A diagram would be best here.-->
In CC2, logic gates on a blue teleport network act as one-ways if their output side is on (not necessarily from the gate itself), and as gaps in the wire if it is off. Logic gates can be "occupied"; the player, monsters, and blocks can be sent to the output of a logic gate even if there's no teleport on the other side, but the next object to enter the teleport can't be sent to the same place until the current one leaves. However, the player loses all control if they switch to a Chip or Melinda in a logic gate, and if anything is in a logic gate when the level is restarted, the game will probably crash.




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Entities can exit the next red teleport in any unblocked direction. An entity will exit the next teleport from the opposite direction they entered, like with blue teleports, but if that direction is blocked, it will search clockwise for the next open direction. This means that [[partial posting]] cannot be achieved with a red teleport unless all four sides are blocked. [[Chip]] and [[Melinda]] can override the direction they leave a red teleport by holding any direction before they exit, which is required in the level [[Thinktank]].
Entities can exit the next red teleport in any unblocked direction. An entity will exit the next teleport from the opposite direction they entered, like with blue teleports, but if that direction is blocked, it will search clockwise for the next open direction. This means that [[partial posting]] cannot be achieved with a red teleport unless all four sides are blocked. [[Chip]] and [[Melinda]] can override the direction they leave a red teleport by holding any direction before they exit, which is required in the level [[Thinktank]].


Red teleports can be attached to [[wire]] and will be disabled if the wire is not active.
Red teleports can be attached to [[wire]], in which case they will be "on", or enabled, if and only if the wire is active. All "on" red teleports are on a single network, while each "off" red teleport is on its own, 1-teleport network.


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The '''green teleport''' is a teleport introduced in [[Chip's Challenge 2]]. It sends movable objects to another green teleport chosen pseudorandomly in a direction chosen pseudorandomly. Green teleports share the same pseudo-random number generator (PRNG) as [[walker]]s, meaning a small offscreen room containing [[blob]]s and green teleports can be used to randomize walker movement.
The '''green teleport''' is a teleport introduced in [[Chip's Challenge 2]]. It sends movable objects to another green teleport chosen pseudorandomly in a direction chosen pseudorandomly. Green teleports share the same pseudo-random number generator (PRNG) as [[walker]]s, meaning a small offscreen room containing [[blob]]s and green teleports can be used to randomize walker movement.


If the exit teleport's chosen exit direction is blocked, it will try another direction. If the chosen destination is blocked on all sides, the object will still teleport there, but not be able to move or teleport back, which will cause it to become completely trapped unless at least one [[toggle wall]] or [[switch door]] is present to possibly release the object. If all exit teleports have [[object]]s on top of them, the attempt to teleport immediately fails, and whatever was trying to enter the green teleport instead slides past it.
If the exit teleport's chosen exit direction is blocked, it will try another direction. If the chosen destination is blocked on all sides or covered by a movable object, the attempt to teleport fails, and whatever was trying to enter the green teleport instead slides past it, like a blue teleport on its own wired network.


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The '''yellow teleport''' is a teleport introduced in [[Chip's Challenge 2]]. They will attempt to send movable objects to another yellow teleport in reverse reading order if the exit direction is not blocked, similar to a blue teleport. Unlike all other teleports, if the exit directions for all yellow teleports are blocked, the movable object will put the yellow teleport in their inventory. This means that yellow teleports later can be dropped elsewhere.
The '''yellow teleport''' is a teleport introduced in [[Chip's Challenge 2]]. They will attempt to send movable objects to another yellow teleport in reverse reading order if the exit direction is not blocked, similar to a blue teleport. Unlike all other teleports, if the exit directions for all yellow teleports are blocked, the movable object, if it's not an ice block or a directional block, will put the yellow teleport in their inventory. This means that yellow teleports later can be dropped elsewhere. Note that every movable object in CC2 has an inventory just like Chip's: they can hold up to 4 items each, and picking up a 5th will drop the 1st. This is usually not visible, as most monsters can't normally pick up tools, but this can be demonstrated with yellow teleports and [[Item Bestowal]].


Yellow teleports are technically not [[item]]s but are instead treated as terrain, and thus they can only be dropped on [[floor]]. However, they cannot be dropped on a tile containing a [[no sign]] and an item, and if one is dropped on a blank no sign it will no longer be collectible.
Yellow teleports are technically not [[item]]s but are instead treated as terrain, and thus they can only be dropped on [[floor]]. However, they cannot be dropped on a tile containing a [[no sign]] and an item, and if one is dropped on a blank no sign it will no longer be collectible. Additionally, if there is only one yellow teleport at the start of the level, it can never be picked up.


Yellow teleports can be overridden in the same way as red teleports.
Yellow teleports can be overridden in the same way as red teleports. Unlike red teleports, however, yellow teleports can be partial posted with just the opposing direction blocked off, just like blue teleports.


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== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Partial posting]], for the process of redirecting teleportation methods.
* [[Partial posting]], for the process of redirecting teleports.


[[Category:Tile groups]]
[[Category:Tile groups]]

Revision as of 04:26, 5 March 2020

The teleport is a class of tile in Chip's Challenge that sends movable objects to another part of the level. When an object enters a teleport, it will exit out the next teleport of the same color on the same network if one is available. They generally behave as sliding tiles, except in Lynx and CC2, objects enter them at their normal walking speed. Each color teleport behaves differently when Chip, Melinda, a monster or another object passes through it, as described below.

Blue teleport

The blue teleport, also commonly referred to as simply teleport due to being the only teleport tile in Chip's Challenge 1, is a teleport tile that sends movable objects to another part of the level. When an object enters a blue teleport, it will exit out the opposite side of the next teleport in reverse wrappable reading order - right to left within any row, then moving on to the right of the next row to the north, and so on - assuming the teleport is not covered (except in Lynx, in which case teleports behavior can be glitchy and complicated when multiple are covered), this is a legal move, and the Twice Step Glitch has not been activated. If these assumptions do not hold, the game will continue to search for the next teleport for which they do hold. Should the search reach the northwest corner, it will start over from the southeast corner.

In MSCC, if operating in black-and-white mode, the teleport appears as a white circle with a cross-shaped arrow to let the player know they can enter the teleport in any direction.

Should the search reach the original teleport, different things will happen, depending on the ruleset. In MS, it will act as a non-directional ice tile - the object will slide across it if that move is legal, or bounce back if it is not. However, a block or monster in the latter case will stick on the teleport and the teleport will cease to function. (For a demonstration of this, go to Drawn and Quartered, teleport directly up to the north-east room from the start, and release the fireballs into the teleport.) In Lynx and CC2, if it is blocked on the other side, objects will stop on the tile and then treat it as floor. In Lynx, Chip will be stuck if he gets in this situation and the level must be restarted.

As a teleport slide is involuntary in all rulesets, Chip can boost on his very next move in MS, and the second force floor in a force floor-teleport-force floor sequence can be overridden in Lynx and CC2.

In MS, teleports beginning on the lower layer of the grid will refuse to function, and work as ice tiles just as if it redirected to itself. In Lynx, blocks that start on teleports will be teleported automatically; they will teleport upwards by default, but if a clone block is used it will teleport in the clone block's direction.

In CC2, blue teleports can be hooked up to wire. Wired blue teleports can only exit to other teleports on the same wire as them. If a blue teleport receives a current from any side, it will relay that current to all four sides of itself. This behavior can be used to create a circuit that splits into four directions, as a wire on floor that travels in four directions only allows the current to move horizontally or vertically.

Logic Gates

In CC2, logic gates on a blue teleport network act as one-ways if their output side is on (not necessarily from the gate itself), and as gaps in the wire if it is off. Logic gates can be "occupied"; the player, monsters, and blocks can be sent to the output of a logic gate even if there's no teleport on the other side, but the next object to enter the teleport can't be sent to the same place until the current one leaves. However, the player loses all control if they switch to a Chip or Melinda in a logic gate, and if anything is in a logic gate when the level is restarted, the game will probably crash.


Red teleport

The red teleport is a teleport introduced in Chip's Challenge 2 which, like a blue teleport, can send movable objects to other red teleports in the level. It differs from a blue teleport in that it sends entities to the next teleport in normal reading order.

Entities can exit the next red teleport in any unblocked direction. An entity will exit the next teleport from the opposite direction they entered, like with blue teleports, but if that direction is blocked, it will search clockwise for the next open direction. This means that partial posting cannot be achieved with a red teleport unless all four sides are blocked. Chip and Melinda can override the direction they leave a red teleport by holding any direction before they exit, which is required in the level Thinktank.

Red teleports can be attached to wire, in which case they will be "on", or enabled, if and only if the wire is active. All "on" red teleports are on a single network, while each "off" red teleport is on its own, 1-teleport network.


Green teleport

The green teleport is a teleport introduced in Chip's Challenge 2. It sends movable objects to another green teleport chosen pseudorandomly in a direction chosen pseudorandomly. Green teleports share the same pseudo-random number generator (PRNG) as walkers, meaning a small offscreen room containing blobs and green teleports can be used to randomize walker movement.

If the exit teleport's chosen exit direction is blocked, it will try another direction. If the chosen destination is blocked on all sides or covered by a movable object, the attempt to teleport fails, and whatever was trying to enter the green teleport instead slides past it, like a blue teleport on its own wired network.


Yellow teleport

The yellow teleport is a teleport introduced in Chip's Challenge 2. They will attempt to send movable objects to another yellow teleport in reverse reading order if the exit direction is not blocked, similar to a blue teleport. Unlike all other teleports, if the exit directions for all yellow teleports are blocked, the movable object, if it's not an ice block or a directional block, will put the yellow teleport in their inventory. This means that yellow teleports later can be dropped elsewhere. Note that every movable object in CC2 has an inventory just like Chip's: they can hold up to 4 items each, and picking up a 5th will drop the 1st. This is usually not visible, as most monsters can't normally pick up tools, but this can be demonstrated with yellow teleports and Item Bestowal.

Yellow teleports are technically not items but are instead treated as terrain, and thus they can only be dropped on floor. However, they cannot be dropped on a tile containing a no sign and an item, and if one is dropped on a blank no sign it will no longer be collectible. Additionally, if there is only one yellow teleport at the start of the level, it can never be picked up.

Yellow teleports can be overridden in the same way as red teleports. Unlike red teleports, however, yellow teleports can be partial posted with just the opposing direction blocked off, just like blue teleports.


See also