HamSandwich is a collection of working source code for several of Hamumu Software's titles from 1998 through 2007. Running HamSandwich requires assets from official versions of the games, available for free from https://hamumu.itch.io/.
Saves and profiles from the retail versions of the games are fully compatible with HamSandwich saves, except that controls will need to be reconfigured.
The original code releases on which this project is based are available from hamumu.com.
See also:
Builds of HamSandwich for Windows, Linux, MacOS, and Android can be downloaded from HamSandwich on itch.io, either directly or through the itch.io app for auto-updates. Web builds of the game can be played on GitHub Pages or on itch.io.
Support is available:
- In #sourcecode in the LoonyChat Discord.
- By email at [email protected].
- On the GitHub issue tracker, for confirmed bugs or deficiencies.
The recommended way to compile the games is MinGW on Windows. You can also build for one of the platforms listed below. Prefer to use Git to download the source code rather than downloading a ZIP archive as doing so makes it much easier to stay up-to-date and to publish your mods.
First-time setup:
- Install MSYS2, an environment for compiling C++ code.
- Visit https://www.msys2.org/ and download and run the latest "msys2-x86_64" installer.
- Choose a relatively short path with no spaces (such as
C:\msys64
orD:\tools\msys2
). - After installation finishes, run
pacman -Syu
in the console that opens. - When asked to do so, close the console and reopen it from the Start Menu (MSYS2 64bit > MSYS2 MinGW x86).
- Run
pacman -Syu
again.
- Use
cd
to select the directory where HamSandwich will go.- For example, if you want the code to go in
C:/projects/HamSandwich
, runcd C:/projects
.
- For example, if you want the code to go in
- Run
pacman -S git
to install git, a tool used for source code collaboration. - Run
git clone https://github.com/SpaceManiac/HamSandwich
to download the code. - Run
cd HamSandwich
to enter the directory.
Compiling and running:
- Run
./run
to compile and run the launcher, or./run <project>
to compile and run one game.- For example, to run Supreme With Cheese, write
./run supreme
. - To compile without running, write
make
ormake <project>
. - To debug, use
./run tool=gdb <project>
. - See
./run --help
for more.
- For example, to run Supreme With Cheese, write
- Run
git pull
to fetch changes which have been published here.
- When installing Visual Studio, choose the "Desktop development with C++" workload.
- Download the code:
- On the Get Started screen, choose "Clone a repository".
- For "Repository location", enter
https://github.com/SpaceManiac/HamSandwich
. - Click Clone.
- OR, use Git to clone the code anywhere you like and "Open Folder" the "HamSandwich" folder.
- After the project loads for the first time, select the game you want to run:
- Click the down arrow next to "Select Startup Item".
- Click "Show/Hide Debug Targets...".
- Uncheck "Select All".
- Check "launcher.exe (Install)" as well as "gamename.exe (Install)" for each game you care about, and click OK.
- If the games are missing from this list, try using the Visual Studio Installer to install "C++ CMake tools for Windows" and reopening the project.
- Click the down arrow again and pick the game you want to run.
- Click the button to compile and run the game.
- To run in windowed mode, go to "Debug" > "Debug and Launch Settings for (game)" and add
, "args": ["window"]
.
- Use
git
to clone the repository. - Use
make
and./run
as described above to build and run the games. - If not on Ubuntu, Arch, or another supported distribution, install dependencies manually:
- CMake, Ninja, and GCC.
- Development libraries for SDL2, SDL2_mixer, and SDL2_image.
- In Terminal, run
git clone https://github.com/SpaceManiac/HamSandwich
.- If you get the prompt to install XCode: accept it, wait for it to finish, then run the command again.
- Enter the repository with
cd HamSandwich
. - Use
make
and./run
as described above to build and run the game.
- Use Android Studio to open the HamSandwich folder as a project.
- OR, build from the command line:
- Install Java 11 or newer.
- Use
./gradlew packageDebug
to build. - Use
./gradlew installDebug
to install to a connected Android device. - Use
tools/bootstrap/android-sdk adb logcat
to view logs.
- If on Windows, install and use MSYS2 according to the instructions above.
- Use
./run os=emscripten
(and optionally a project name) to build and run the games. - Use
make os=emscripten
(and optionally a project name) to only build the games.
See Modding below for information on how to bundle worlds and other assets, and Publish to Web for how to publish to GitHub Pages.
Check out existing mods on the list of published mods.
To get started with custom worlds, graphics, music, and so on, place your
custom files inside the appdata/<project>/
folder alongside your profiles.
When the game loads assets it checks that folder before the installer. Any
worlds you save in the editor will show up in this folder.
To include a finished world or custom assets in your mod, move them to
assets/<project>/
, creating the folder if necessary, and use Git to commit
them.
If your mod's saves are not compatible with the base game, such as in the case
of a typical remix world, edit source/<project>/CMakeLists.txt
and add a line
to the HamSandwich_add_executable
section like:
HamSandwich_add_executable(
...
APPDATA_NAME "SpaceManiac-mystic-remix"
...
)
To import another game's content, copy the relevant installer from the other
game's source/<project>/<project>.json
into that of the game you are modding,
for example:
{
"installers": [
{
"filename": "supreme8_install.exe",
/* ... */
},
{
"filename": "mystic_install.exe",
/* ... */
}
]
}
You can add a line like "mountpoint": "mystic"
to an installer to access its
files by a path like mystic/graphics/items.jsp
instead of it overriding the
original files.
When the game searches for a world or asset file, it scans in a particular order:
- The
appdata/<project>
folder. - Inside any
.zip
files in theaddons/<project>
folder. - The
assets/<project>
folder. - The listed
"installers"
in reverse order.
That means that overrides should go at the end of the list and base assets should go at the beginning.
Most image editors offer a facility to choose what palette (sometimes called a
colormap) to use when authoring 256-color bitmaps. The palette can be imported
from any asset from the games, or from the provided source/lunaticpal/example.bmp
. In case you are
having trouble, you can use the included LunaticPal tool with ./run lunaticpal
to
convert images.
However, note that .bmp
images shown with the "Show Pic/Movie" special
effect can use any palette of up to 256 colors and are not limited to the
palette used by LunaticPal. You should use an image editor such as GIMP to
convert such images to Indexed mode, which will give superior results compared
to LunaticPal.
LunaticPal is mainly useful for tiles, backgrounds, menus, and so on which will appear on-screen at the same time as other graphics.
HamSandwich includes a quick-and-dirty JFT tool. Use it from the command line like:
./run jfttool path/to/font.jft
to extract a.txt
and a series of.png
files from a font./run jfttool path/to/font.txt
to re-pack a.txt
and.png
s into a font
HamSandwich includes JspEdit, a GUI tool for editing .jsp
files. The
interface is reasonably self-explanatory. Run it with ./run jspedit
.
We do not currently have a 3D prerendering pipeline. If you are a 3D modeller and could use one, please get in touch.
Creating .flc
(FLIC) movies
FLIC movies originated with Autodesk Animator. The movies included with Hamumu games were created with 3D Studio Max. FLIC export is also provided by contemporary tools like Jasc Animation Shop, and the modern pixel art and animation editor Aseprite. Note that HamSandwich fixes a bug in the engine's FLIC decoder which may cause some exported animations to render incorrectly on the retail versions of the games.
For programmers, libraries like Aseprite FLIC Library and LibFLIC may be of use.
Before publishing for the first time, fork this repository on GitHub and commit and push your changes to your fork.
To limit publishing to only the games you care about, open
source/CMakeLists.txt
and edit the # Games
section according to the
comments there.
- Create a game page on itch.io.
- In Settings > API keys, click "Generate new API key" then view and copy it.
- In your GitHub repository's Settings > Secrets > Actions tab, add two secrets:
- Name: "ITCH_GAME", value:
your-itch-username/your-game-name
. - Name: "BUTLER_API_KEY", value: the API key from step 2.
- Name: "ITCH_GAME", value:
- Future pushes will automatically publish builds to itch.io.
- Open
android-project/build.gradle
and change theapplicationId
to something different according to the comments in that file. - Create a keystore file in a safe place:
You will be prompted to set a password. You can leave the rest of the options blank.
tools/bootstrap/android-sdk keytool -genkey -v -keystore ../hamsandwich.keystore -alias hamsandwich -keyalg RSA -keysize 4096 -validity 10000
- Base64-encode that keystore:
base64 ../hamsandwich.keystore > ../hamsandwich.keystore.txt
- In your GitHub repository's Settings > Secrets > Actions tab, add two secrets:
- Name: "ANDROID_KEYSTORE_B64", value: copy and paste the contents of
hamsandwich.keystore.txt
from step 3. - Name: "ANDROID_KEYSTORE_PASSWORD", value: the password you set in step 2.
- Name: "ANDROID_KEYSTORE_B64", value: copy and paste the contents of
- Future pushes will automatically publish APKs to itch.io.
- In your GitHub repository's Settings > Pages tab, ensure the "Source" is set to "GitHub Actions".
- Your site will be published at
https://YourGithubUsername.github.io/HamSandwich
- Future pushes will automatically update your site.
Delete the build/install/
folder, run make install
, then zip and upload that
folder's contents to publish a copy for your platform. For Emscripten builds,
use the build/webroot/
folder instead.