Algodoo Marble Race Updated | Direct | 2024 |

Blaziken, now a sputtering oval, limped across the finish line 12 seconds later. Volt remained trapped behind the glass, occasionally phasing in and out of reality. Chonk had punched a hole through the bottom of the Crucible and was falling forever into the gray void, utterly at peace.

Frost took a more methodical approach. It rolled smoothly down the center, its high density keeping it planted. It used the momentum from the first drop to swing a pendular bridge just enough to slip through without losing speed.

Chonk simply dropped. The gate opened, and Chonk fell straight down onto the first conveyor belt, crushing its hinges. The belt, now under a massive load, began to smoke and slow down. Chonk didn't care. Chonk was a glacier. algodoo marble race

The sky in the Algodoo void was a flat, forgettable gray. But the contraption dominating the center of the scene was anything but. It was called , a towering sculpture of hinges, lasers, thrusters, and scripted teleporters, all built by a user named PhyzzX .

In Algodoo, the physics never truly ended. They just waited for the next click . Blaziken, now a sputtering oval, limped across the

WHAM. Blaziken was flattened. Not destroyed—flattened into an oval. It could still roll, but terribly, wobbling like a broken shopping cart wheel.

Frost, meanwhile, hit the edge of the laser pit. But its high friction coefficient saved it. It scraped along the very rim, losing a layer of its glossy texture, but catching a tiny ridge. It wobbled, tipped… and fell into the finish funnel. Frost took a more methodical approach

Now it was a two-marble race. Frost was on the high ring, a series of narrow catwalks suspended over a death pit of lasers. Blaziken, having finally escaped the slow-mud, took the lower route—a risky "gravity tunnel" that required perfect timing.

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