TRIPLANE(6) | Games Manual | TRIPLANE(6) |
Triplane - a side-scrolling dogfighting game.
triplane [OPTION]...
Triplane Classic is a side-scrolling dogfighting game featuring solo missions and multiplayer mode with up to four players. It is a port of the original Triplane Turmoil game for DOS and aims to match the original game exactly so that high scores remain comparable to the original.
Note that triplane does not warn about unknown options.
After starting the game, click through the splash screens to see the main menu. Then click ROSTER and click the pen on the right to create a new pilot entry. Type your name and press enter. Click the keys on the left to get back to main menu. Click ASSIGN PILOTS and check the SOLO check box beside the red plane (top left) to select the German plane for solo game. Click on the background to get back to the main menu.
Click TAKEOFF TIMES and MISSION I. Read your assignment carefully and click on the arrows to look around the map. Your objective is to destroy the buildings identified by red boxes around them. When you are ready click FLY and use the following controls:
When you have destroyed all the targets try to land by releasing power and gliding to the runway. Holding up and down simultaneously activates the air brake system. When the plane is stopped on the runway, press S to re-enter the hangar and resupply bombs and fuel.
N.B.: If you have a new computer you may encounter serious keyboard errors. This is due to the cost savings of the keyboard manufacturers. The current keyboards cannot handle more than 3-6 keys simultaneously. If you encounter keyboard problems, see the "on/off power" option below.
See the "ASSIGN PLAYERS MENU" chapter on how to select the solo game country.
Winning a solo game requires that:
Scoring is mostly based on how many planes you have shot down. Extra points are awarded from destroyed enemy ground installations and infantry without regard to who destroyed them. You will get penalty points for shooting down allied planes and for destroyed allied ground targets and infantry.
See the "ASSIGN PLAYERS MENU" chapter on how to select players for multiplayer mode and visit the "REQUEST TRANSFER" menu to select the multiplayer level.
To configure plane controls for multiplayer mode, visit the "PLANE MECHANICS" menu. Choose a country and then configure either the keyboard or a joystick (a game pad is also OK).
If you want to change the keyboard layout for the chosen country, click the keyboard and you will be prompted to press buttons for all six controls needed to fly. The order is Up, Down, Roll, Engine power, Bombs and Guns. Remember that brake is always Up+Down simultaneously.
Joystick configuration is still a bit experimental and it is not easy to play the game with a joystick. Start by clicking Joystick 1 or Joystick 2 and follow the on-screen instructions. There are two types of joystick actions. You can hold down a joystick button and press Space on the keyboard. Alternatively you can move a joystick to a different position (left, right, up or down) and press Space. Finally, by pressing "D" you can disable a control completely. You can use this for example if you have configured up and down actions to be buttons so that you can hold them together and thus do not need a separate brake control. Disabling the roll control enables autoroll, which keeps the plane upright.
This is a special menu. This appears when the actual game is in progress. There are three columns: Bombs, ammo and fuel. Use the Bomb and Guns buttons to select one of the columns, and adjust the value using the Up and Down buttons. Press Roll or Power to exit, and a mechanic will push your plane onto the runway. If you want to return to the hangar, just press Roll or Bomb, and the mechanic will push your plane into the hangar.
This menu is used to select players for solo and multiplayer modes. There are four boxes, one for each country.
Inside each box there are four radio buttons and two text fields:
If you activate the solo mode the computer will automatically adjust the other countries to NO-PLAYER mode. (If you want to play the solo missions, now just exit and click the take-off times flyer in the main menu.) For example, assume that you want to be the German player, your friend wants to be the Japanese player and computer wants(?) to be the Finnish player. Choose "Human pilot" in the German and Japanese boxes, "No player" in the English box, and "Computer pilot" in the Finnish box.
Note: If you select the last multiplayer level (CAVERN) and you set the computer to be the Finnish or the English plane, these planes will be disabled when game begins. (Computers cannot handle takeoffs in caves.)
This is the options menu, where you can define game-related parameters. On the right side you can see four tabs:
VISION
HEARING
The following options are for multiplayer only.
Country | Germany | Finland | England | Japan |
Ammunition | ** | ** | *** | * |
Maneuverability | ** | * | * | *** |
Fuel | ** | ** | *** | * |
Speed | ** | *** | ** | * |
Bombs | ** | * | ** | *** |
Endurance | ** | *** | ** | * |
The German plane is very deadly in dogfight because it is designed for it. It does not have any particular strengths or weaknesses.
The Finnish plane is the fastest and the toughest but it has a poor bomb capacity and great skill is needed to pilot it because of its low turning rate.
The English plane never runs out of anything (except bombs). Its only disadvantage is the low maneuverability.
The Japanese plane has the biggest bomb capacity and it is even more agile than the German plane. Too bad it always runs out of fuel.
Like in a real Air Force, you will be awarded with higher ranks and medals when you have served your country well. The medals are shown on top of your pilot in the roster menu. Every rank has its own ribbon which is located beside your pilot in the roster menu. When you start a new pilot you have no medals and you have only one ribbon, 2nd Lieutenant. When you advance ranks you do not lose your previous ribbons like you would in real life.
Best pilot in the country - Medals
When you complete a sequence of solo missions (six of them) you will be awarded the "Best pilot in the country" medal. Every country has its unique medal, but the main color of the medal depends on the country so it will be very easy to see which country has awarded you with it.
Special medals
There are two special medals. The first is the veteran medal, Golden Star. It will be awarded to you when you have flown 1000 missions. The second is the hero medal, Silver Eagle. It will be awarded to the pilot who has killed the most and died the least. There is only one Silver Eagle medal in the world, so be careful, it will change its owner very quickly.
Ranks and their abbreviations
Here is a list of ranks appearing in Triplane. In the roster an abbreviation of the rank will be automatically added to your name (for example: 2nd Lt. Dragst). Both solo and multiplayer games will affect it so you probably will not gain a lot of promotions by just playing one of them.
The ranks are:
If you are ever promoted to Colonel, you have probably played for some time. But remember, it is not impossible to gain it, you just need play a little longer.
Triplane finds its configuration directory by searching the following directories in this order:
The configuration directory contains the following files:
Triplane tries to locate its data directory by looking at which of the following directories exist, in the following order:
The data directory contains only one file:
The original Triplane Turmoil was developed by Markku Rankala, Teemu J. Takanen and Henrikki Merikallio. Some work was also contributed by Risto Puhakka, Antti Lehtoranta and Mikko Kinnunen.
The portable SDL version, Triplane Classic, was created from the original source by Timo Juhani Lindfors (timo.lindfors@iki.fi), Teemu J. Takanen (tjt@users.sourceforge.net), and Riku Saikkonen. We also thank Timo Lilja for his earlier Xlib porting efforts and Sami Liedes for spellchecking and optimization ideas.