So, the level is basically like a speed-run? It sounds cool, but I'm wondering if I'd have any hope of seeing it the way it should be, or if I should just wait for someone to do an LP video.
Also, pardon me while I break out the pedantry:
1: This is based around a copy written song.
You mean
copyrighted. Copyright refers to the intellectual-property
rights of the writer, designer, artist (or in this case composer and/or performer of the music) etc.; whoever made it. Copy
writing (usually written as two words, or hyphenated: "copy-writer") refers to either creating content for advertisements, or -- ironically -- editing your own or someone else's work to correct errors. This is why open source, Creative Commons etc. content is sometimes referred to as "copylefted" even though the "right" in "copyright" refers to the other meaning of "right".
I'll just keep it off you're guy's site to keep the legality on the down low for now.
You mean
your or you guys'.
You're is a contraction of
you are, so it always and only means "you are".
You guys would refer to all of the people you're talking to (e.g., "you guy
s are probably sick of my spelling corrections already"); the "s" at the end of "guys" there indicates plural (more than one of you) rather than possession (belonging to you).
Your guy's would mean "belonging to the guy that belongs to you" -- as in, "In this game, your guy
's mission is to reach the end of the level before the music ends," where "your guy" refers to the player-character usually called Juni.
Whether the apostrophe (') goes before or after the
s depends on whether it's singular or plural. (Or another contraction, like it's = it is.) If you're talking about one person, it's
that guy's -- as in "I can't wait to play that guy
's level" -- while
those guys' refers to more than one person, as in "those guy
s' levels are too hard for me, I wish they'd make them easier like that one guy does".
2: This level has allot to do with the timing of said song.
You mean
A_lot, as in
a large amount. There is no such word as "alot" -- though as you saw via spellcheck, or just happened to typo,
allot with two Ls
is a word, meaning to assign or set a quantity for something, as in "The time al
loted for the exam is 40 minutes." Seeing "alot" instead of "a lot" actually drives me kinda nuts, but that one is so common, I wouldn't have pointed it out if I wasn't already commenting about the copyrighted/copy written thing. Intellectual property issues are taken pretty seriously around here.
It's good that you're giving credit to where you got the music from, even if you haven't asked for / probably can't get permission to use it.
Sorry for going all grammar-nazi on you!
It was meant as friendly help, not an attack.