安装 Steam
登录
|
语言
繁體中文(繁体中文)
日本語(日语)
한국어(韩语)
ไทย(泰语)
български(保加利亚语)
Čeština(捷克语)
Dansk(丹麦语)
Deutsch(德语)
English(英语)
Español-España(西班牙语 - 西班牙)
Español - Latinoamérica(西班牙语 - 拉丁美洲)
Ελληνικά(希腊语)
Français(法语)
Italiano(意大利语)
Bahasa Indonesia(印度尼西亚语)
Magyar(匈牙利语)
Nederlands(荷兰语)
Norsk(挪威语)
Polski(波兰语)
Português(葡萄牙语 - 葡萄牙)
Português-Brasil(葡萄牙语 - 巴西)
Română(罗马尼亚语)
Русский(俄语)
Suomi(芬兰语)
Svenska(瑞典语)
Türkçe(土耳其语)
Tiếng Việt(越南语)
Українська(乌克兰语)
报告翻译问题


Still a pretty good game.
2) No
3) Not in the main game. In the Mystery Masterpiece challenge mode, the title is hidden.
4) No
5) There's a Marks mode where you can fill in and erase squares as a purple squares or X's.
6) 40x40
7) Workshop can filter paintings in the in-game browser by Newest, Rating, Exhibits, Subscribed and Unsubscribed. Browsing on the Steam Workshop website lets you filter by size.
2) Sad - currently I'm playing in griddlers com... And Triddlers are really interesting sub-type of nonograms
3) Does it choses nonograms also from Workshop?
4) sad
5) ok
6) why max is so small?
7) Will in future it include more filtering options?
The nonograms in Paint it Back are just a png image file with as many colors as you like. When solving, a white pixel = a blank space and any other color = a black space. The Workshop editor is basically a paint program that can check your painting for having only one soltution, plus some other stuff.
Mystery Masterpiece only chooses random paintings from the 150 or so from the original game.
40x40 seems fairly large to me, but I guess that's relative to people's experience playing other nonogram games.
More filtering options - possibly.