Arqade Asked on April 14, 2021
I recently started playing the standard Osu beatmaps – I’m not sure of the technical term of the format but I’m referring to the traditional beatmaps which involve clicks, sliders, reverse sliders and spinners.
My question: What exactly triggers ‘game-over’ when playing a beatmap?
What I know: if I mess up a lot in a particular run through of a beatmap, it’s game over (i.e., the beatmap stops)
What I don’t know: What is the exact termination condition for a beatmap (assuming no mods)? In other words, what exactly has to happen to trigger ‘game-over’ when playing a beat-map?
From observation, it seems that termination is linked to some threshold number of mistakes that can occur within some time-frame.
It also seems as though it’s not related to total accuracy since the start of the song. For example, I’ve had run-throughs where it was game-over after I made a bunch of mistakes one-after-another, but, even after taking these most recent mistakes into account, my cumulative accuracy on that run-through (up until the point of termination) was 85%. Meanwhile, I’ve completed beatmaps where I’ve maintained a 70-75% accuracy throughout.
By the 'game over' screen you mean this?
Well, you'll only reach it if you lose all your Health (as in reach 0) without the No Fail mod on.
Other conditions that also triggers it are:
^ Note that the Perfect (SS or Quit) mod restarts (same as pressing Ctrl-R) the beatmap when you mess up the perfect run (100, miss or combo break).
As for avoiding this, refer to this osu! Wiki quote
- The top left bar is your "health".
- This will decrease at a steady rate, depending on the beatmap difficulty set by the mapper(s), but you can replenish it by hitting notes at the right time.
- A perfectly timed hit (300 hit or Geki Beat) will increase your health more than a badly timed hit (50 hit).
- A total miss will take a good chunk out of your health.
Depending on the difficulty of the beatmap, your perfect (or on-time beats) and misses will affect your score differently.
The drain rate determines the speed your health depletes.
The higher the drain rate, the more accurate you'll have to be to avoid draining faster than your hits can return.
Just to be clear, a 50, 100, 300 will increase your health, while misses, combo breaks will take a chunk out of your health.
Apart from that, messing up (missing) a beat or breaking a combo will remove 1/4-1/3# of your health bar.
# It's either 1-third or 1-quarter.
Note: Combos are broken when your combo count (bottom left) is reset to 0.
This happens when you:
Your combo is basically a score multiplier and can be increased by:
(Which is why sliders can create ridiculous combos whilst scoring very little)
Correct answer by aytimothy on April 14, 2021
it's easier to explain than anyone would think.
actually, it depends on two triggers: HP and miss
if you miss and you have x hp, it subtracts the value based on the difficulty level the amount of HP is also specified in the beatmap settings
so you can have huge HP and small HP drain and small HP and huge HP drain
HardRock mod reduces the amount of hp (i guess) so basically when you play, you most time have 0hp when you play beatmap that already had high HP drain without HR
and when you miss, osu need to subtract x amount of hp definied in hp drain so when you HP got negative number then you die.
Answered by Methosu on April 14, 2021
You get game over when your health bar drops all the way down(on the top left)
To get more health you have to hit Geki(getting all elements in a combo with only 300s), Katu or Katsu(all elements in a combo with no misses or 50s). Katu is a 300 while Katsu is a 100
Hp drain is a factor in maps that affects how fast you lose hp. A good example of a map with relatively low drain is Airman.
The Hard Rock mod will increase drain and all other difficulty settings by 40% and circle size by 30%.
Answered by Grass on April 14, 2021
Get help from others!
Recent Answers
Recent Questions
© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP