(Redirected from Audiosurf air)
Steam Workshop: Audiosurf 2. New skin for use with any mode! Inspired by the album art for The Resistance by Muse. This skin shows off two new skinning techniques released today: 1) Mesh morphing. Morph targets can new be use.
Audiosurf 2 | |
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Developer(s) | Dylan Fitterer |
Platform(s) | Microsoft Windows, OS X, Linux |
Release | |
Genre(s) | Puzzle, rhythm |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
Audiosurf 2, previously named Audiosurf Air, is a rhythmscore attackvideo game created by Dylan Fitterer, and the sequel to Audiosurf. It was launched on October 2, 2013 for Windows through Steam Early Access,[1]OS X and Linux versions were released on January 9, 2015.[2] The game is Steam Workshop compatible, allowing players to create and share mods for the game.[1] It came out of early access on May 26, 2015.
Gameplay[edit]
The game uses the player's own music library to generate a course the player needs to navigate through. The sequel adds a wakeboarding mode that lets players distort the songs and features two boats that tug players along and provide opportunities to jump and pull off tricks.
Development[edit]
On March 22, 2012, a sequel to Audiosurf, Audiosurf Air, was announced via Dylan Fitterer's Twitter account and the Audiosurf launch screen.[3] On October 2, 2013, an early access version was released via Steam.[1] On May 26, 2015, Audiosurf 2 left Early Access.[4]
Reception[edit]
IGN awarded the game a score of 7.5 out of 10, saying 'Audiosurf 2’s excellent Mono mode carries this hypnotic rhythm game through music management issues and lesser modes.'[5]
References[edit]
- ^ abcWhitehead, Dan (October 2, 2013). 'Audiosurf 2 out today on Steam Early Access'. Eurogamer. Retrieved March 18, 2015.
- ^Fitterer, Dylan (January 9, 2015). 'Mac, Linux, SteamOS! Advanced puzzle modes!'. Steam Community. Retrieved March 18, 2015.
- ^Fitterer, Dylan (March 22, 2012). 'Audiosurf Air announcement'. Twitter. Retrieved September 10, 2012.
- ^Savage, Phil (May 7, 2015). 'Audiosurf 2 will leave Early Access on May 26'. PC Gamer. Future plc. Retrieved May 26, 2015.
- ^'Audiosurf 2 Review'. IGN.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Audiosurf_2&oldid=938270731'
Yesterday my mouse cursor started 'drifting' or more accurately twitching itself slowly towards the top left of my screen. It acts as if the buttons are also being randomly pressed, like it it will draw a small selection box or highlight a desktop iconon its journey.System: DIY Windows 7-64 Pro system, Fully patched/SP1(Asus M4A78T-E MB, AMI Bios V3406, 12Gb ram 2x2 and 2x4 G-skill ripsaws, Radeon 6870 Video Card, AMD Phenom II X4 945 CPU, 700 watt PS)MS Security Essentials for my AV/AMMouse is a logitech M510 wireless.Have run: Full MSE scan, Roguekiller, tdskiller, hitman pro, malwarebytes and combofix. 4 cookies found and deleted. Downloaded and installed all the latest chipset drivers I could find from Asus.Now before anyone says its the mouse: It does this with the USB antenna removed, USb keyboard removed, USB printer removed, batteries removed from the mouse, system powered off for 5 minutes and restarted in safe mode with all devices still unplugged. It startsdrifting the bmoment/b the cursor appears. What DOES stop it is going into device manager and deleting the second of two 'HID compliant mouse' under mice and other pointing devices.
Deleting the first kills the mouse unless I remove and reinsert the USBantenna. Normally I'd just say whatever and ignore it but windows insists on reinstalling this second mouse on startup so I have to delete every time I turn on my PC.I have also noticed that there are 11 items under Human Interface devices, one control device, 5 each HID-compliant devices and 5 USB input devices. Deleting these eventually kills the keyboard and the mouse but If I guess right on the USB input devices I canfind the right one to stop the drifting but again all 11 items reintall when the computer is booted/restarted.Just because I know it will be asked that I try it anyway, I have tried replaced the keyboard and mouse, nothing changed. (Logitech wireless KB and mouse to a couple old Dell wired devices I have in my closet) Have also removed any misc junk software I couldfind and removed java but then had to reinstall it to view Asus's driver download page.
The drifting got so bad that I could no longer use the mouse or the touchpad. I needed to move files off my old Dell 8100 XP to cloud storage and the only way that I could keep the cursor in one position long enough to click a selection was to apply constantpressure in the opposite direction on the stick pointer. After moving many files using this technique, the cursor finally quit drifting!
This seems to confirm your theory about recalibration, but it is very mysterious that this issue appeared just recentlyas I never used the stick pointer at all before, just the touchpad. My Dell is 13 years old, perhaps one of the strain gages broke from old age.:-(. Mine's not a stick pointer. It's just a regular Logitech optical mouse.
I realized that part of the problem is related to the limited storage I have. I am using a SSD with 217Gb. The drifting problem was at its worst when my available storage shrank to below4Gb.
It may have something to do with the limited space available for the virtual memory paging file size. At its worst, my mouse pointer just drifts to either the lower left corner or the Top Left corner, at such a fast speed that it is impossible for youto counter its direction and try to 'catch' the place you want to click. At that point the only thing I could do was to use the keyboard shortcuts to reboot the system. Even after reboot, most of the time it will still drift. And I found that the driftinggets worse over time that you have the system on.Once I cleared my files to create more available storage - now I have 45Gb available on my SSD, the drifting reduced, at least to a point where I can still work.
The pointer becomes 'normal' most of the time, but still drifts occasionally. Even as I typethis message the pointer is taking a walk on its own.Until now, I still can't find the root cause of this problem! I've changed to a new mouse, tried a wired mouse, disabled/reinstalled the drivers, etc. Nothing seems to fix it.