Tux on r/place
You can reach us directly on GitHub, Discord, Matrix, or Telegram.
If you would like to help us place Tux, we highly recommend you use our overlay! It's a userscript that runs through a browser extension that will render an image on top of the r/place canvas showing incorrect pixels:
You can find the installation instructions here.
For troubleshooting regarding the overlay see here, or ask us directly on Discord/Matrix/Telegram.
If you prefer not to use our overlay, you can check out the coordinate guide.
You can propose a modification to the artwork by submitting a pull request for artwork/tux/tux.png. After we review and accept it, your change(s) will automatically be deployed.
If you are an ally trying to change your artwork, PR your corresponding artwork with the updated image in artwork/allies/
To change the anchor point of any piece, change the coordinate values in the corresponding entry in your positions.json
.
You can find the official color palette here.
Our canvas corners:
(20,679) (71,679)
(20,758) (71,758)
Ideally we would take up the entire 2000x1000 canvas for ourselves, but that would make other communities sad... And it's also impossible with a community of this size. We would create 3 progressively larger pixel arts (a 50x50, a 75x75 and a 100x100 version) for Tux and Distro/DE. We would draw the appropriate one in r/place, based on territory gained.
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It is very fast and lightweight
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It costs exactly $0
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EVERY SINGLE ASPECT OF LINUX can be modified however you want, and is only limited by hardware
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It can look real sexy (take a look at r/unixporn)
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You don't have a giant, monopoly, money-seeking company forcing you to do what it thinks is best for you, making you the product (I'm looking at you Microsoft and Apple...)
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Many, many options to choose from and to customize your system as you see fit
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You get to brag about how smart you are when a Windoze user sees you "hAcKIng" (I use Arch BTW)
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The command line is really good and lets you do very complex things in one line, while user-friendly graphic interfaces work well for those that don't want to use commands
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Package managers make installing software a breeze, and always from a verified malware-free source
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It's almost impossible to get a virus in Linux (meme)
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TONS of support for Linux: ask a question, and in a few minutes people will be responding
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Countless other reasons