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This article is about a computer game. For a tabletop game, see IceTowers. For a skyscraper, see Ice Tower.


Icy Tower
Icy tower 1.4 logo.gif
Developer(s) Free Lunch Design
Publisher(s) Publisher Missing
Designer Johan Peitz
Engine Allegro library[1]
status Status Missing
Release date EU 20011222December 22, 2001
(see history)
Genre
Mode(s) singe-player
Age rating(s) Ratings Missing
Platform(s) PC/MS Windows[nb 1]
Arcade system Arcade System Missing
Media downloads, magazines
Input keyboard, gamepad, joystick
Requirements
Credits | Soundtrack | Codes | Walkthrough

Icy Tower is a popular freeware computer game that is a combination of an action game and a platform game. The goal of the game character is to climb a frozen tower by jumping onto successive steps of a staircase inside it. The goal of the player is to reach a high number of steps (floors) and points (awarded for making visually attractive sequences of jumps). As the character climbs the tower, the game becomes progressively more difficult. The player controls the character using a keyboard or other input devices.

When playing, Icy Tower players usually try to achieve good results in one of several existing styles of playing, known as categories. Players' achievements in any of the categories may later be published in any of the online communities established for that purpose. One of the methods that allow players to compare their results are online high score lists. Another are online tournaments in which they compete directly.

Icy Tower was created in 2001 by a Swedish game developer Free Lunch Design. New features are being added to the game both by its developers, who regularly release its newer versions, and by its players, who refine its gameplay by making custom skins and characters that refurbish the game and create separate applications and modifications that allow changing its default behaviour. Mobile and online versions of the program have also been made.

Gameplay[ | ]

File:Icy tower gameplay screenshot.png

A screenshot of Icy Tower 1.4.

The game screen is fully occupied by a vertical cross section of a cylindrical tower, only a fraction of total height of which is visible at a time. The player starts the game on the ground floor of the tower. The character controlled by the player may move inside the tower and jump from one floor to another, but its movement is limited by the two walls of the tower and the semipermeable structure of the floors, which it can only penetrate from below. If the character ventures beyond the upper edge of the screen, the screen will follow its current position, so that it always remains within its scope.

After the character reaches the 5th floor the game screen begins to gradually move down. Since that moment the player's objective is to maintain the required pace of the character's ascent in the tower and not to fall below the bottom edge of the screen, which ends the game. The rate of the downward movement of the screen increases sharply every 30 seconds, which is equivalent to a rotation of the clock in the upper left corner of the screen. The clock breaks down after its fifth revolution, however, and the rate of the falling increases no further.

The goal of the player is to reach the highest possible floor and accumulate the highest possible number of points (score). Points are awarded for every single reached floor and for making special sequences of jumps. The physics of the game can be expressed in two principal rules:

  1. The higher the speed of the character is before it jumps, the higher the jump will be;
  2. The speed of the character (and, consequently, the direction of its movement) can be changed during the jump itself.[1]

It is also possible for the player to increase the speed of the character by hitting a wall of the tower (wall bouncing). To wall bounce a character it is required to direct it towards a wall and reverse the direction of the movement immediately after the collision. This technique makes it possible for the player to continue playing even if there is no space (or time) to accelerate the character on the floors themselves. The tower is of infinite height and it is impossible to reach the top.[1] After the game ends, a recording of the character's progress in the tower can be saved in a separate file (replay) and viewed at will.

Floors[ | ]

The length of the floors depends on their individual number, the version of the game, and a random factor. Their arrangement is entirely random. Their appearance changes visibly every 100 floors.[nb 2] Since the version 1.2 Icy Tower allows the player to choose the visual type of the floors on which each of his games. In order to do that, however, he is required to unlock the desired floor type beforehand, which is done by reaching a floor that bears that floor type by default. For example, if the player wishes to start the game from the fourth floor type, that by default belongs to the floors 300–399, he must reach at least the 300th floor first.

Points[ | ]

It is possible for the player to perform a sequence of jumps in the game, each jump spanning either zero, two or more floors. As long as the player reaches each floor within three seconds since reaching the previous one, such a sequence is called a combination (combo). A combo is the primary method of earning points in Icy Tower. For a combo to be rewarded with points, however, it must span at least four floors in at least two jumps, and subsequently one of the following conditions must be met:

  1. the character makes a jump that is one floor high;
  2. the character descends onto one of the floors below;
  3. the character does not reach another floor within the next three seconds (and it has not yet fallen below the bottom edge of the screen).

Every completed combo is awarded a number of extra points, which is equal to the number of floors in the combo squared. A special notice (reward) displays on the screen after a combo is finished, contents of which depend on its length and the version of the game. Regardless of combos, the player is awarded a ten points bonus for every floor he has reached (which is revoked, however, if the player later descends from the given floor).

High scores[ | ]

Evolution of the built-in high score tables in different Icy Tower versions
Category description Describes games? Has a table?
Maker's
nickname[nb 5]
yes no
Highest
score
until 1.4 yes
Highest
floor
until 1.4 since 1.2
Longest
combo
until 1.4 since 1.2
Unique category of the table[nb 6] since 1.4

Icy Tower records players' best results in built-in high score tables. Every table contains data about zero to five Icy Tower games; a single table row represents a single game. Every game contained in a table is being defined by its results in a certain number of Icy Tower categories. Finally, all games in a table are sorted according to their results in a certain category, which is relevant and specific to the given table. Whether a given Icy Tower category partially defines a given game or not, as well as whether a given category has a separate table it is relevant to, depends on the type of the category and the version of the program.

Players may also publish their accomplishments in online high score lists. Entries in such lists can usually be sorted by their results in the three aforementioned main Icy Tower categories – Score, Floor and Combo (the primary categories), as well as in a number of categories that are semiofficial or unofficial (the secondary categories). High score lists usually require players to provide replays from their games as evidence for their results. The official Icy Tower list resides on the web server of Free Lunch Design.[4]

It is also possible to compare performance of two players using the so-called K+ method. The K+ formula is a product of a sum of quotients, where the operands of the divisions represent records of both players in a specific Icy Tower category. For example, the K+ value from Score, Floor and Combo is represented by the expression

,

where , and stand for the highest score, highest floor, and longest combo, respectively ( and standing for the players being compared). In the above formula the ratio of Floor high scores has been doubled (to minimise the initial predominance of the Score-related categories over the Floor-related ones in it) and the ratio of Score high scores has been reduced to its square root (to express the fact that the amount of score earned in an Icy Tower game is usually close to its highest Combo value squared). The K+ mechanism is often being implemented in online high score lists so that every participant to the list could compare his results to the best results of the ranking.

Since the version 1.4 Icy Tower also evaluates the ability of a player by assigning him to one of the eleven levels of proficiency in the game, the so-called ranks. The ranks are based on the grade system used in the United States schooling. Therefore the rank equivalent to a beginner's degree of ability is represented by the letter "F", while a somewhat larger amount of it – by the letter "A". The fact of assigning the player to a certain rank depends on his records in four game categories: Floor, Combo, CC 1 and NML.

Objectives[ | ]

The following tables enumerate all potential objectives available for the player in Icy Tower. Listed are available floor types, along with Icy Tower versions they were introduced in, combo rewards, along with their respective combo length requirements in all versions of the game, and attainable player ranks (only relevant in Icy Tower 1.4).

Features[ | ]

Categories[ | ]

Ever since the possibility of creating replays from games and submitting them to high score lists was introduced players have been inventing various styles of playing that diversify the gameplay of Icy Tower. Among the most popular styles are:

NML (N00b Masters League[nb 9])
To reach a high floor completing no combos on the way (it is allowed, though, to begin a combo and finish the game without ending it). This style also has a more limiting variant named UNML (Ultimate N00b Masters League), which requires making 1 floor high jumps only during the entire game.
RRML (Radical Rejump Masters League)
To reach a high floor with a game setting that allows the character to perform uninterrupted series of jumps (the so-called rejump) enabled without ever releasing the keyboard key responsible for jumping – it may be pressed only once during the entire game.
JC 2 (Jump Combo 2)
To complete a high combo making 2 floor high jumps only during the entire combo sequence. Icy Tower 1.4 also stores players' records in a related yet simpler category named JS 2 (Jump Sequence 2), where the goal is to make a high number of consecutive 2 floor high jumps. Styles named JC 3 and JS 3 require making 3 floor high jumps, respectively, etc. As the character can take 5 floors in one jump at most, only four JC (JS) categories exist.
CC 1 (Clock Challenge 1[nb 10])
To reach a high floor during the first revolution of the timing clock. CC 2 represents the highest floor reached before the third revolution of the clock, etc. There also exists a composite style named TF (The Fastest), objective of which is to accumulate the highest possible sum of CC 1, CC 2, CC 3, CC 4 and CC 5.

It is possible to combine styles – for example, there is a category named "RRUNML", which is a combination of RRML and UNML.

Other features[ | ]

Most versions of Icy Tower feature special hidden modes of gameplay that allow players to alter the default appearance and behaviour of the game. When a hidden mode is enabled, it is impossible for the player to save replays. Additionally a number of trainers has been made that let players change the nominal number of reached points and floors (such a change is irrelevant to the game, however, as it does not help a player in competing against others).[6][7]

The frame rate of Icy Tower can be mechanically decreased, for example by running the game in the windowed mode instead of the fullscreen mode or by using a separate application. Players who employ such strategies benefit from a larger amount of time to figure out and perform the most efficient movements and jumps of the character they are controlling, relatively to other players. In January 2006 several known players revealed they were using this tactic, the so-called slowdown, to increase their results. This announcement caused a decline in popularity of the official high score list, which at the time contained results of players who both "slowed down" the game and played it at the default speed.[9] In May 2007, the moment the official Icy Tower website was opened, the high score list has been reset. The new version of the list, however, still lacks a feature that prevents "slowed down" replays from being uploaded to it.[10]

Icy Tower 1.4 is able to measure the difference between the default frame rate of the game, according to which a single rotation of the timing clock should last exactly 30 seconds, and the rate under which the given replay was actually recorded. This data is subsequently stored in replay files. This feature of the game allows managers of high score lists to automatically accept or reject any replay being uploaded to them, according to how much does its speed deviate from the norm.[11]

Plot[ | ]

The goal of the game character is to "do some mighty cool jumps and moves" in the tower in order to "get ... awe from his friends in the hood".[1] The game is set in a typical modern settlement in the Western world. The main character named Harold the Homeboy is a young and carefree member of the skate subculture who communicates with the player using American slang. The eponymous tower is usually depicted as a mediaeval round tower, sometimes equipped with battlements.[12][13]

Harold the Homeboy is also the protagonist of two other Free Lunch Design games, Harold's Hills and Harold's Tower Blast.

History[ | ]

The history of Icy Tower releases
1st 1.0 EU 20011222December 22, 2001
2nd 1.1 EU 20020111January 11, 2002
3rd 1.2 EU 20031011October 11, 2003
4th 1.2.1 EU 20040131January 31, 2004
5th 1.3 EU 20050906September 6, 2005
6th 1.3.1 EU 20051029October 29, 2005
1.3.2 EU Cancelled[nb 12]
7th 1.4 EU 20090603June 3, 2009
Xjump, the game which inspired the makers of Icy Tower.
Icy Tower 1.0.
Icy Tower 1.4.

Icy Tower was created by a Swedish game developer Free Lunch Design using the C programming language and the Allegro game library.[1] Its designers were inspired by Xjump, a game for the Linux operating system.[14]

The game follows a sequence-based software versioning scheme. Its current version is 1.4. The major number of the program never changes, as its authors do not intend to make Icy Tower 2.[15] Changes in the minor number denote the entire package of the game being changed, together with its sound and graphic resources. Changes in the release number denote a release of a patch, i.e. a modified executable file purpose of which is to fix software bugs present in previous releases of the game. Patches for Icy Tower are being circulated both inside and outside official game packages.

The makers of Icy Tower maintain contact with its players, and their opinions were being taken into consideration in the course of developing new versions of the game.[16][17] The list of the most significant changes made to it to date includes:

Records file (1.1)
An automatically generated and updated binary file that contained data about the player's records at a given time. It could be subsequently submitted to the then official online high score list.[citation needed]
Replay files (1.2)
Small binary files that contain the recording of a given Icy Tower game and the nickname of its maker. Replays are less prone to cheating by manually modifying them than were files used to store players' records in Icy Tower 1.1. Replay saving and viewing features were being improved concurrently with the entire program. For example, replays have since been made easier to sign (1.2.1) and rewind (1.3), as well as possible to sort by various criteria (1.3). It has also become possible to view a progress bar of their duration, their maker's nickname and the arrangement of keys pressed during their making when watching them (1.3) and to save them automatically whenever a player beats his personal record (1.4).
Configurable keyboard settings (1.2)
The possibility to personalise keyboard keys responsible for the character's movements in the tower. Since Icy Tower 1.3 it is also possible to customise the key pausing the game.
Shortened floors (1.3)
This change was introduced in order to make gameplay over the 1000th floor barrier more difficult. In Icy Tower versions prior to 1.3 a sufficiently skilled player was able to casually climb as much as several thousand floors, even at the fastest rate of the downward movement of the screen. This was undesirable, as replays from such games often lasted several minutes or more.
Removal of the immaterial floors bug (1.3)
This bug, known as the "ghost floor" bug, was a collision detection glitch that occasionally caused random floors in the tower not to stop the character falling onto them, usually ending the game as a result. It had only been occurring at the highest game speed and caused several players to quit playing altogether. It was the primary reason behind the making of Icy Tower 1.3. Its creators originally only intended to fix the bug in question in it,[18] release the new version as Icy Tower 1.2.2 and distribute it as a patch.[19]
Player profiles (1.4)
A concept of user accounts (profiles) was introduced in order to help several players play a single instance of the game. A profile contains certain publicly accessible data about the achievements of its owner (his average and best scores in the game, for example), as well as his personal game settings and preferences. The default profile is the so-called guest profile.
Support for secondary categories (1.4)
A possibility to manually change default game gravity and speed and default floors length was introduced (this change emulated – to a limited degree – features and options that were previously available for players only by the means of special trainers). Results achieved in the environment modified in such manner do not, however, affect the state of the built-in high score lists, which only register results recorded in default conditions. The categorial scope of the built-in lists was nevertheless expanded; since Icy Tower 1.4 they also register scores in categories formerly considered secondary (such as JS or CC).
Measures against slowdown (1.4)
Icy Tower 1.4 estimates the possibility that the player's computer was artificially slowed down and records results of this estimation in replay files. A standalone program named SDbuster (Slowdown Buster) was also created in 2007 to help detect slowed down replays, which calculates the possibility of a given replay being slowed down based on previously remembered differences between replays recorded in normal and reduced speed.

Lesser changes include a visual overhaul of the game (1.4), the possibility to choose the default floor type of the game (1.2) and the possibility to create custom game characters (1.2). Additionally, four new combo rewards were introduced, namely Super!, Fantastic!, Splendid! and No way!, and thresholds of combo length for certain rewards were increased (1.2).

Ports[ | ]

Icy Tower Mobile[nb 13]
Boxart
Developer(s) Xendex Entertainment
Publisher(s) Hands–On Mobile
Designer Johan Peitz[nb 14]
Engine Engine Missing
status Status Missing
Release date EU 20081006October 6, 2008
Genre
Mode(s) singe-player
Age rating(s) Ratings Missing
Platform(s) Java ME
Arcade system Arcade System Missing
Media WAP Push (MIDlet)
Input Inputs Missing
Requirements Requirements Missing
Credits | Soundtrack | Codes | Walkthrough


Icy Tower Facebook
Boxart
Developer(s) Free Lunch Design (Muskedunder Interactive[nb 15])
Publisher(s) Publisher Missing
Designer Johan Peitz[nb 14]
Engine Engine Missing
status Status Missing
Release date EU 20090924September 24, 2009
(public beta release[20])
Genre
Mode(s) singe-player
Age rating(s) Ratings Missing
Platform(s)
Arcade system Arcade System Missing
Media online game
Input keyboard
Requirements Requirements Missing
Credits | Soundtrack | Codes | Walkthrough

On March 14, 2007, a press release has been published on the Free Lunch Design website announcing the establishment of a partnership between FLD and mobile game developer Xendex Entertainment regarding the porting of Icy Tower to the mobile environment.[21] The ensuant game named Icy Tower Mobile (ITM)[nb 13] was released on October 6, 2008. Due to limitations of mobile platforms the game lacks several features present in its PC counterpart, such as publishing replays from games outside the mobile phone or changing default game characters.[22]

On September 24, 2009, a beta version of a Free Lunch Design game named Icy Tower Facebook (ITFB), developed on the Adobe Flash platform within the development framework of the Facebook social networking website, has been publicly released.[20] Icy Tower Facebook allows players to compare their results with results of their friends within the Facebook system. It is also possible for players to personalise their in-game avatars and unlock additional game levels (so-called towers), which correspond to various game styles in the PC version of Icy Tower, by exchanging them for the virtual currency of the game (so-called coins). ITFB lacks the possibility of recording replays.

Unofficial Icy Tower ports for the Nintendo DS[23] and PlayStation Portable[24] video game consoles also exist, made by players.

Reception[ | ]

Icy Tower ranks high in the "Most Popular" ranking of the "PC games" section in the Download.com software directory website; its average monthly number of downloads was "more than 20,000" in 2006, amounting to over five millions as of 2009.[25][26] The total number of Icy Tower downloads was estimated at over 11 millions in 2008.[27] In terms of the number of websites devoted to the game, it is most popular in Czech Republic, Germany and Poland.[28] Central European countries are also home to a major portion of top Icy Tower players.[4][29] According to Johan Peitz, the author of the game, the reason behind the popularity of Icy Tower is that it allows players to compete in several different categories, for example in striving for both high floors and high scores.[30]

Online Icy Tower communities allow their members to exchange high scores, replays and comments about the game and its gameplay. Additionally, players frequently compete against themselves in online competitions, so-called tournaments. Icy Tower tournaments usually consist of a number of rounds, each lasting one or more days. In every round, contestants are required to record one or more replays with a result in a specific category of the game.[31][32][33] Players did also organise live meetings, which took place in Cracow and Warsaw, Poland[34][35] and Prague, Czech Republic[citation needed].

On May 30, 2007, an official Icy Tower website operated by Free Lunch Design has been launched, available at icytower.­freelunchdesign.­com.[nb 16] On June 3, 2009, the day of Icy Tower 1.4 release, an additional, complementary site has been opened at icytower.com.

Add-ons[ | ]

Internal structure of Icy Tower allows changing its appearance through downloading and installing repackaged resource files of the game (mods).[36][nb 17] Mods serve both aesthetical and practical functions, as they are sometimes used to improve players' performance in the game. The latter effect occurs if the mod conceals those elements of Icy Tower appearance that usually distract a player while he plays (such as the clock, combo rewards or differences between floor types). An example of a mod that simplifies the gameplay is Retro Tower, a recognised mod that reduces the palette of the tower to black and white.[37][38][39][40] Mods were created for all Icy Tower versions, although those made for a given major version of the game are incompatible with the executable files of another.[nb 18]

Since the version 1.2 Icy Tower allows players to create additional custom characters which may replace the two default characters provided in the game package, Harold the Homeboy and Disco Dave. Making a new character only requires the player to create an image file of a certain structure. It is possible, however, to also create more complex ones, using which will cause the game to modify its soundtrack[41] and colour palette[citation needed].[nb 19]

There also exists an array of tools that assist players in training, changing the game physics or analysing their results.

Notes[ | ]

  1. It is possible to execute Icy Tower on the Linux operating system using the Wine software. Icy Tower. WineHQ AppDB. Retrieved on September 8, 2009
  2. The floor type visible after the character surpasses the entire series (i.e., all known floor types) depends on the version of the game. Prior to the 1.2.1 version, the first type of the series was displayed for the second time; from the 1.2.1 version on, the last one was displayed, which is characteristic of floors above either the 900th (in Icy Tower 1.2.1) or the 1000th (in all subsequent versions) level.
  3. The number of segments is the number of repetitions of the image representing the middle part of a floor. The Icy Tower Floor Controller trainer, commonly used to modify default floor lengths, equates the length of a floor with the number of its segments, increased by 1. For example, floors labelled "4–4" in ITFC correspond to floors that are 3 segments long.
  4. Where represents the number of the floor, and the quotient is being rounded down to a whole number.
  5. The nickname may contain an unlimited number of characters if the result has been accomplished in Icy Tower 1.4 (and the player was not using the guest profile), and three characters otherwise.
  6. In Icy Tower 1.4, games in tables are only described by their results in a single category, which is the very category that governs the given table. Categories featured in Icy Tower 1.4 are Score, Floor, Combo, longest unfinished combo, NML, CC 1–5 and JS 1–5. In other words, Icy Tower 1.4 features fifteen different tables.
  7. Cf. a screenshot of the game.
  8. In Icy Tower versions 1.3 to 1.3.2 the type of the floors above the 1,000th level barrier would be better approximated as "transparent rainbows" rather than "stars".
  9. The name of the category refers to the word n00b, a corruption of the word newcomer, alluding to the fact that newcomers to Icy Tower rarely perform combos in their games.
  10. Prior to the release of Icy Tower 1.4 this category was known as Clock Crush Challenge (CCC).
  11. All paths mentioned are relative to the root Icy Tower directory.
  12. Icy Tower 1.3.2 was a cancelled release which was designed to prevent players from playing if their computers were recognised by the game as overly slowed down. This measure against slowdown was subsequently abandoned in favour of the SDbuster program and, later, inbuilt features of Icy Tower 1.4.[citation needed]
  13. 13.0 13.1 The game is also known as Icy Tower ME (ITME).
  14. 14.0 14.1 As the designer and artist of Icy Tower in the version for personal computers.
  15. A Swedish game developer that owned Free Lunch Design as of March 2008. What's new. Muskedunder Interactive. Retrieved on December 30, 2009 “The Swedish flash game developer Muskedunder Interactive today [i.e. March 30, 2008] announced it has acquired the independent game developer Free Lunch Design.”
  16. The site has subsequently been relocated to itc.­freelunchdesign.­com.
  17. It is also possible to modify sound resources of the game.
  18. With an exception of Icy Tower 1.0 and 1.1.
  19. In Icy Tower 1.4 it is no longer possible to change the game palette using a custom character.

References[ | ]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Free Lunch Design. Icy Tower. PC, (v1.4). (Readme file named "Icy Tower v1.4").
  2. Free Lunch Design. Icy Tower. PC, (v1.2). (Readme file named "Icy Tower v1.2").
  3. Frequently Asked Questions - Informations for new members!. Free Lunch Design Forum (June 20, 2007). Retrieved on August 21, 2007 (The "The floors in Icy Tower" section).
  4. 4.0 4.1 Highscores. Icy Tower Community. Free Lunch Design. Archived from the original on June 3, 2007 Retrieved on December 30, 2009
  5. Ranks. Free Lunch Design Forum (June 25, 2009). Retrieved on September 8, 2009
  6. 'Icy Tower' MultiPage. DLH.Net. Retrieved on July 26, 2007
  7. Programs for Icy Tower v1.3.1. Free Lunch Design Forum (June 27, 2006). Retrieved on July 26, 2007
  8. Yaari, Arnon. Fun Mode. Retrieved on July 26, 2007 (Description of the mode by a former member of Free Lunch Design).
  9. The secret of high scores. Free Lunch Design Forum (January 15, 2006). Retrieved on July 26, 2007
  10. Fair Highscore Lists. Free Lunch Design Forum (July 16, 2007). Retrieved on July 26, 2007
  11. Free Lunch Design. Icy Tower. PC, (v1.4). "Time data is recorded in four different ways every now and then while playing and is used to determine the speed at which the game was played. [...] you can use this to help you decide whether you think the replay is ok or not." (Readme file named "Icy Tower v1.4 Itrcheck").
  12. Harold's Tower Blast. Free Lunch Design. Retrieved on December 30, 2009
  13. freelunchdesigngames (June 2, 2009). Icy Tower 1.4 - OUT NOW!. YouTube. Retrieved on December 30, 2009
  14. Serafin, Lukasz (September 28, 2005). Intervju med Johan Peitz (Swedish). cure.se. Archived from the original on February 11, 2007 Retrieved on December 30, 2009 “[...] I got the idea from Xjump, an old game installed on the school computers. I expanded and improved the gameplay, packaged it neatly, and there you are – the first version was ready.”
  15. Frequently Asked Questions. Free Lunch Design. Retrieved on July 26, 2007 (The "FAQ for Icy Tower" section).
  16. IT In Multiplayer? (NETWORK) Yes or NOT AT all?. Free Lunch Design Forum (October 1, 2005). Retrieved on July 26, 2007
  17. A new version?. Free Lunch Design Forum (January 28, 2009). Retrieved on January 31, 2009
  18. Peitz, Johan (July 18, 2008). The needs of the one - or the many?. Sleeping Eggplant. Retrieved on September 10, 2009
  19. Icy Tower 1.2.2 Beta! (Polish). Forum Icy.pl (February 14, 2005). Retrieved on July 26, 2007
  20. 20.0 20.1 Links on "Icy Tower". Facebook (September 24, 2009). Retrieved on October 4, 2009 “It's finally here: Icy Tower for Facebook! The game is limited to 5000 players during the initial test phase, so claim your slot now!”
  21. Free Lunch Design Takes Games to the Next Level (PDF). Free Lunch Design (March 14, 2007). Archived from the original on March 23, 2007 Retrieved on July 26, 2007
  22. Maliszewski, Piotr (July 29, 2008). wywiad z twórcami Icy Tower Mobile - Xendex (Polish). ICYTOWER.mobi. Icy.pl. Retrieved on December 26, 2008
  23. I'm porting IT to the DS. Free Lunch Design Forum (December 23, 2008). Retrieved on September 9, 2009
  24. LUA Icy Tower v0.6 (German). Downloads / LUA-Spiele. PSPSource.de (February 4, 2007). Retrieved on September 9, 2009
  25. NEWS: Icy Tower climbs the charts. Free Lunch Design Forum (February 27, 2006). Retrieved on December 26, 2008
  26. Icy Tower specs and Arcade Game specifications. Download.com. Retrieved on September 16, 2009
  27. Handsonmobile (May 30, 2008). Icy Tower Mobile Edition. YouTube. Retrieved on December 30, 2009
  28. Icy Tower Highscore List. Free Lunch Design. Archived from the original on May 6, 2007 Retrieved on December 30, 2009
  29. Kyratzes, Jonas (August 20, 2006). Interview with Johan Peitz. Archived from the original on January 7, 2007 Retrieved on December 30, 2009 “Icy Tower ... features the possibility to play it in different ways, you can either aim for score by doing combo jumps, or you can aim for height by rushing towards to top all the time.”
  30. Holiday 2003 Icy Tower Contest - Win a copy of Call of Duty. Computer Action Games. About.com (2003). Retrieved on July 26, 2007
  31. 2nd Annual Icy Tower Holiday Contest - 2004. Computer Action Games. About.com (2004). Retrieved on July 26, 2007
  32. ICY TOWER NATIONS CUP 2006 r.. Free Lunch Design Forum (November 22, 2006). Retrieved on July 26, 2007
  33. Icy.pl board users meeting - Cracow, 15.07.06. Free Lunch Design Forum (July 14, 2006). Retrieved on July 26, 2007
  34. Icy Tower players meeting - Warsaw, 05.07.08. Free Lunch Design Forum (May 18, 2008). Retrieved on December 26, 2008
  35. Mods for Icy Tower 1.4. Free Lunch Design Forum (July 5, 2009). Retrieved on September 17, 2009
  36. IcyTower Awards 2004 - RESULTS (Polish). Forum Icy.pl (January 15, 2005). Retrieved on July 26, 2007
  37. IcyTower Awards 2005 - Results (Polish). Forum Icy.pl (January 10, 2006). Retrieved on July 26, 2007
  38. ICY AWARDS 2006 - choose the winners!. Free Lunch Design Forum (January 21, 2007). Retrieved on August 24, 2007
  39. Icy Awards 2008 - results. Free Lunch Design Forum (January 19, 2009). Retrieved on September 20, 2009
  40. Free Lunch Design. Icy Tower. PC, (v1.4). (Readme file named "Icy Tower custom characters").
Cite error: <ref> tag with name "itm_distributors" defined in <references> is not used in prior text.

External links[ | ]

Website Message board Resources repository Icy Tower Icy Tower Mobile Icy Tower Facebook
Free Lunch Design [9] [10] [11] [12]
Official website [13] [14] [15]
Official board [16] [17] [18]


cs:Icy Tower fr:Icy Tower he:אייסי טאוור no:Icy Tower pt:Icy Tower fi:Icy Tower tr:Icy Tower

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