Please create an account or Login! Have fun!

J.B. Lewis: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
m (Conversion script moved page J.B. Lewis to j.B. Lewis: Converting page titles to lowercase)
(No difference)

Revision as of 16:20, 27 February 2019

J.B. Lewis

John "J.B." Lewis is one of the top Chip's Challenge players, being second place in Chip's Challenge 1 (5,977,650), second place in CCLP2 (6,050,900), second place in CCLP3 (6,093,660), second place in CCLP1 (6,006,000), and first place in CCLP4 (6,111,100). He also has first place across all five Lynx scoreboards for CC1 and CCLP1-4.

Among his many high scores, the most famous in each set are generally known as the first 306 in Follow the Glacier Brick Road, whose boosting was once thought to be humanly impossible to perform, and the almost inhumanly unlucky 436 route to Blobnet (though strategy, readable on its page, helps out quite a bit).

J.B.'s talent, often known as prodigious, is usually best seen in squeezing the last few seconds out of a level, using roundabout routes, efficient block pushing, and laser-accurate monster usage.

J.B was also the group leader of the CCLP3 staff. Thirty-three of his 99 eligible levels were placed into CCLP3, which was the most of any designer. He reprised his role as staff leader for CCLP1, and had 13 of his levels make it into the final set.


Levelsets

J.B has primary level sets available online. JL1 contains 101 levels, many of which were available in a more primitive form in his previous set JohnL1, which since has been taken offline. JohnL2 was a set created to emulate the style of AndrewB1, and thus is only compatible with the MS ruleset.

His next set, JBLP1, has had two different iterations. The first was a 100 level set that eased the difficulty curve of JL1 by swapping out some levels for new ones and making existing ones more fair. After the construction of JBLP1, he began work on JBLP2, but was quickly running short on ideas to fill in 100 levels. In August 2014, he revamped the existing JBLP1 by adding new levels from JBLP2 and swapping out others, bringing the level total to 149.

Later, in May 2015, Chip's Challenge 2 was finally released on Steam. J.B. released a new 100-level set titled Centennium, which was a collection of ported levels from JBLP1 with added bonus flags and decorative floors and walls, which at the time were two of CC2's largest differences from the first game. He began work on a second set titled Centennium II which featured original compositions, but once again found himself short of ideas, this time after a whopping 10 levels.

Between then and his latest set he spent most of his Chip's Challenge time optimizing, until 2018 when he started his magnum opus for Chip's Challenge 1 level designing: Walls of CCLP1. This new 149-level set, inspired by other sets such as Walls of CCLP4 and Walls of CCLP3 from other designers, was planned to feature 149 brand new levels using the walls of Chip's Challenge Level Pack 1. Since that point on, he has continuously worked on and off on the set and is now at 144 total levels, a mere 5 away from his ultimate goal. He plans to release the full 149-level set by March 2nd.

Levels in official packs

CCLP1

CCLP3

CCLP4

YouTube

J.B maintains a YouTube channel where he posts Let's Plays. He was the first to do Let's Plays of Chuck's Challenge 3D and Chip's Challenge 2. He has also done many Let's Plays of CC1 sets, official and custom, of which include:

  • CC1
  • CCLP1
  • CCLP2
  • CCLP3
  • CCLP4
  • Pit of 100 Tiles
  • The Other 100 Tiles
  • CHIP56
  • JoshL4
  • JoshL5
  • JoshL7
  • Walls of CCLP4
  • Ultimate Chip 6