Eviltoys is a 3D Educational game for mine risk education based on Quake1 engine.
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eviltoys.ico
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makebundle

README

== Note to developers ==

This project was made originally to experiment with 3D educational game for One Laptop per Child laptop originnaly called Abcube which is based on Quake1.

Take a look at the wiki for informations on how to "hack" the game data:
You can view it online https://github.com/atphalix/eviltoys/wiki

or for offline use (in mediawiki format)
git clone git://github.com/atphalix/eviltoys.wiki.git

= How to build .xo bundle for installation on OLPC laptop?

- First you need to have make, zip and md5sum (optional) installed in your GNU/Linux distribution.
- run ./makebundle in the root folder of the project source
- You should get eviltoys-1.xo and eviltoys-1.xo.md5sum

= How to Contribute

-  Get a github (free) account.
-  Make a fork of this project.  That will create a repository in your
   account for you to have read/write access to.  Very nice, complete
   instructions for making a Fork are here:  ``https://help.github.com/articles/fork-a-repo``
-  Clone the repository under your account to your local machine.
-  test
-  Make a Pull Request.  This will notify me that I should look at your changes and merge them into the main repository.
-  Repeat!

= Credits

- This project use Quake1 game data from the OpenQuartz project GPL game data:
For more information, see http://sourceforge.net/projects/openquartz/
- This game is designed by Ahmed Mansour (aka atphalix) from Morocco.

== What ``Free Software'' means

When we speak of Free Software, we refer to the software movement in
which your freedoms to use, copy, modify, and study it are ensured.  For
example, you may freely use Freedoom for any purpose you see fit, you
may redistribute it to anyone without needing to ask for permission, you
may modify it (provided you keep the license intact, see `COPYING`), and
you may study it -- for example, to see how a Quake pak file is built.  To
facilitate this, you can get the full source code.

You may read more about Free Software at the http://www.gnu.org/ (GNU)
and http://www.fsf.org/ (Free Software Foundation) websites.