Asenna Steam
kirjaudu sisään
|
kieli
简体中文 (yksinkertaistettu kiina)
繁體中文 (perinteinen kiina)
日本語 (japani)
한국어 (korea)
ไทย (thai)
български (bulgaria)
Čeština (tšekki)
Dansk (tanska)
Deutsch (saksa)
English (englanti)
Español – España (espanja – Espanja)
Español – Latinoamérica (espanja – Lat. Am.)
Ελληνικά (kreikka)
Français (ranska)
Italiano (italia)
Bahasa Indonesia (indonesia)
Magyar (unkari)
Nederlands (hollanti)
Norsk (norja)
Polski (puola)
Português (portugali – Portugali)
Português – Brasil (portugali – Brasilia)
Română (romania)
Русский (venäjä)
Svenska (ruotsi)
Türkçe (turkki)
Tiếng Việt (vietnam)
Українська (ukraina)
Ilmoita käännösongelmasta
The simple timer was activated by the "cube flung button" which is connected to a latching system. This means it must only be pushed once. Even if the cube falls off, it will still activate the timer. The timer activated the "bridge" of angled panels, one by one. While not complicated I thought it made a nice test and so I published it.
The flip panel and laser were SUPPOSED to stay open; the system was latching. It was not originally this way, but it was difficult to align the cube perfectly onto the button, and the latch made this easier. Thanks for the feeedback!