I started playing Thrive again recently & I’ve noticed a new bug that occurs with eukaryotic cells (cells with a nucleus). Normally once a cell gains a nucleus, they get much larger compared to the cells without any, but sometimes after evolving one, I’ll notice some cells in my species that are around a fifth the size of normal ones. Usually, I don’t think this would be easy to notice, but since my cell & some others were in a cluster I got to see it.
It happens right after exiting the editor after gaining a nucleus. The other unevolved cells of your species won’t have a nucleus yet, but when they split & gain one, that’s when the bug happens. One of the sister cells will look normal, but the other will still be the same size as it was before splitting. I’ve seen about 3 of them, I think.
Welcome back Giratine.
This is a well known bug to my knowledge.
However
I am not sure this has been reported before specifically about the bug.
Thanks for the feedback!
I actually happened to be recording while I saw the bug happen so here’s a link to it uploaded on yt if you want: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B2jn1xEbBLY
Like what aah31415 said, it is a well-known bug. I have seen it happen in videos of my favorite Thrive youtuber, SonOfMowgef. I don’t know if this is still the case in the most recent version of Thrive, but I have seen that when I change membrane types, a similar bug occurs where previous versions of my organism still have the previous membrane type.
You mean regular old species remnants or cells with an updated layout?
I think it is the former.
Very interesting video. I think this finally confirms that the “reset organelle layout” function does not properly apply the new visual scale.
This is the open issue about this bug:
Now with this info if anyone wants to, they could probably pretty easily solve this bug.
