For the purpose of this project, a grunt is a sound registered by the microphone, making the Scratch loudness reporter block return a value of 50 or more. Make sure your microphone is on, and that you've allowed Scratch to use your microphone. Press any key (or grunt) to start, then just grunt into the microphone to jump over the obstacles. Thank you @RokCoder for the idea: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/414265420/#comments-149159901 Also try: TYPING PARKOUR: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/409738546 PARKOUR JUNIOR: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/411598805/ If you have a keyboard, but find letters difficult, try NUMBERS PARKOUR: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/414265420/ Art and code is by me (@kriblo), except... Halloween edition: Bowling sound and Skeleton sprite modified from the Scratch library. Music is Ghost Surf Rock by Loyalty Freak Music Thank you @Griffpatch for the awesome Ragdoll Physics: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/356286226/ Thank you @-Rex- for the awesome PTE: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/276672672/ Thank you @RokCoder for the awesome tutorial on how to make a cloud leaderboard: (the code for the leaderboard in this project is all me, but inspired by his tutorial project). Regular music is Brazil Samba from https://www.bensound.com No cats were abandoned in this project.
Update 9 October 2020: (1) I added a mute button, so you can mute the music if this causes feedback problems with your microphone. (2) I've made it so that you can see the Microphone loudness in the startup screen (I might improve the look of that at a later point). If loudness is always zero, it means you have a problem with your microphone settings, or you haven't allowed Scratch to use your microphone. You can also use this project to test if your microphone is working: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/419637749/