Please excuse my ugly design of the game. Also please read all of the Instructions Notes and Credits to understand everything. This is John Conway's Game of Life (GoL) The original Game was a cellular automaton devised by the British mathematician John Horton Conway in 1970. It is the best-known example of a cellular automaton. The "game" was actually a zero-player game, meaning that its evolution is determined by its initial state, needing no input from human players. But I have remade it. HOW TO USE: Click on the food button to feed your population, which multiplies them Use the kill button to kill of some of your population Set your own standards of how to win! Try to challenge yourself.
~~~How to play (and other rules)~~~ Green - If your population is green, it is flourishing. It has a perfect population, has enough food, etc. Blue - If your population is blue, that means it is overpopulated, and you need to... Uhm, get rid of a few people. Yellow- If your population is yellow, that means they are under populated and need more food. Orange - Seriously underpopulated, need a ton of food. RED- MEGA underpopulated need a MEGA ton of food and time to repopulate. If your population is red for too long it dies. HOW TO WIN: This game is very interesting. I have made a few ways to win, but really you get to set the standard of how to win. To win by games rules, have all of your populations be in the green state at the same time. To lose, you either stay in the red population for 10 seconds to get below 1 life. (Life is equivalent to population.) If you find any bugs please report them. In the future, if this game gets some views and plays, I might add more species to you can watch over to make the game more difficult and add slower random times, you know... Find out your own ways to win. You can challenge yourself to get the fastest death, the highest score, anything you want to challenge yourself to do feel free to do it. Post your challenges and scores in the comments, and don't forget to ❤️ and ⭐ this project! #games