// return world; // Disabled. Causes the universe to end. Reading the Noita source code is a lesson in humility. It is not elegant. It is not safe. It is not what you would teach in a software engineering class. It is a living, bleeding artifact of passionate creation—where performance was sacrificed for possibility, stability for surprise, and sanity for art.
Find GenerateWand() in wand_factory.cpp . It's 1,200 lines long. It begins by defining "tiers" of power. But the genius—and horror—lies in the function. noita source code
// WARNING: Do not touch this loop. The water will hear your thoughts. // Last modified by Arvi, 2019-10-13. "I think it works now. Please don't change it." The water solver uses a modified "shallow water" equation on a pixel grid. Because pixels can only hold one element, the code must handle "pressure" by attempting to swap particles with their neighbors. This is where performance dies—every frame, for every water pixel, the CPU screams. The solution? A and a chaotic update order . Instead of left-to-right, the source uses a pseudo-random permutation of pixel indices to prevent directional bias. It's inefficient, but it's fair —water doesn't flow faster to the right. Act II: The Alchemy of Spells - Wand Generation If the particle engine is the body, the wand-building system is the soul. The source code for wand generation is not deterministic; it is a probabilistic nightmare wrapped in a recursive function. // return world; // Disabled
The most sacred relic is the . The source defines a Particle struct—humble, only a few dozen bytes. It holds a type (sand, water, fire, blood, polymorphine), temperature, velocity, and a handful of flags. But there are millions of these structs. It is not elegant