There were two responses, I'm going to respond to both in this message.
For one, games are not played in-browser. They are temporarily loaded
via JAVA and then run on the players computer.
Also, I am not just someone who saw "game" in the list name, and my
site supports any kind of game. JAVA is only used to temporarily store
the game and run it. For instance, someone uploads a .exe in a .zip
file (files must be zipped to upload). JAVA loads this zip, unzips it,
and runs the exe. Nothing on the site is JAVA, they are all exe files.
Thanks,
Matt Kremer
Quoting James Paige <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
I think that was just spam from somebody who saw "game" in the list name
and assumed it would be a good place to advertise his website
that appears to only support java games.
---
James
On Fri, Oct 17, 2008 at 04:38:00PM -0500, pymike wrote:
OOC can the pygame games be played in browsers?
On Fri, Oct 17, 2008 at 3:52 PM, Matt Kremer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
Hello pygame users,
I run a website called GMArcade (http://gmarcade.com). In short, we are
an arcade for indie game developers, where users can post their games.
Here is a list of features:
-Upload your game with screenshots
-Your game can immediately be played online, without users downloading
(JAVA must be installed). Test this out by clicking this link (just
click "Open" if prompted to download a JNLP file):
http://gmarcade.com/generatejnlp.php?id=10
-Participate in discussions on our forums
-Comment and Rate other games
-Start your own Blog!
-Just hang out and have fun!
I hope to attract users from PyGame, as well as other game development
tools. It would be great to see some of you on the site :)
Here's the link again:
http://gmarcade.com/
And if you want to request any new features, just post here:
http://gmarcade.com/requestafeature/
I hope to see you around, thanks again!
-Matt Kremer
http://gmarcade.com/
--
- pymike
"Stop loling into a false sense of hilarity"