For true impressionist masters: type "glitch" at any point after starting to enter Super Glitch Mode! Welcome to Picasnose, the party game where you draw using your nose! After clicking the green flag, you'll be given a prompt of what to draw (you don't have to follow it), instructions on how to play the game, and a random time limit of 2 to 5 minutes. Gameplay instructions are pasted below for quick reference. Good luck, have fun! GAMEPLAY INSTRUCTIONS • The pencil follows your nose. • Hold the space key to draw. • Use the left and right arrow keys to change color. • Line thickness is determined by how close your face is to the screen. (This is still being fine-tuned) SUPER GLITCH MODE • The pencil tries to follow your nose, but might mistake your eyes for a nose every now and then! • Hold the space key to STOP drawing. • Use the left and right arrow keys to change color, if you're lucky. • Line thickness is only somewhat determined by how close your face is to the screen.
(scroll down for AI disclosure) CREDITS Both paintings in the thumbnail are by Pablo Picasso, and the writing in the thumbnail was done by me with the pen tool since the text tool wasn't working for some reason. Painting on the left is The Soup (1902), and the painting on the right is Self Portrait, 1907. Images were sourced from the New York Times website and wikiart.org respectively, and the image of Self Portrait has been flipped. AI DISCLOSURE Most of the ending accolades were generated using Google Gemini, and added with minimal editing. Some of the more basic ones, and almost every one with a real-world reference, were thought up by me. Generative AI was NOT used: • in the creation of the pencil sprite, which is a prefab Scratch asset. • in any part of the coding or debugging process. Don't use AI to code, kids, or you won't actually improve or grow as a programmer. • to come up with the game's title - that abomination of a pun is fully a Purplefork original. • in the creation of the thumbnail image. Another Purplefork original idea right there. Scratch's Face Sensing extension, to my understanding, uses machine learning to detect faces. While this falls under the umbrella of "AI" in computer science, this is not the same technology as Generative AI, which is what AI mostly refers to in common parlance (at least when it comes to controversy).