In order to be upset I would need an expectation that the tile was reachable before. If I have zero clue how the nature works I don’t have an expectation that it was possible beforehand so I am not losing any ability.
Then there is the technicality tht even if I know that I can’t move I don’t know anything about the nature of the world so maybe I think that the grey square can teleport to me? The framing seems to assume a lot of basic assumption about gridworlds. So which parts I can assume and which parts I geniunely do not know?
But yeah I did fail to read that there was a specification of the wanting.
I would need an expectation that the tile was reachable before. If I have zero clue how the nature works I don’t have an expectation that it was possible beforehand so I am not losing any ability.
Whoops, yeah, I forgot to specify that by the rules of this maze (which is actually generated from the labyrinth in Undertale), you can initially reach the goal. These are really fair critiques. I initially included the rules, but there were a lot of rules and it was distracting. I might add something more.
In order to be upset I would need an expectation that the tile was reachable before. If I have zero clue how the nature works I don’t have an expectation that it was possible beforehand so I am not losing any ability.
Then there is the technicality tht even if I know that I can’t move I don’t know anything about the nature of the world so maybe I think that the grey square can teleport to me? The framing seems to assume a lot of basic assumption about gridworlds. So which parts I can assume and which parts I geniunely do not know?
But yeah I did fail to read that there was a specification of the wanting.
Whoops, yeah, I forgot to specify that by the rules of this maze (which is actually generated from the labyrinth in Undertale), you can initially reach the goal. These are really fair critiques. I initially included the rules, but there were a lot of rules and it was distracting. I might add something more.