To update, download and run the new installer.
To update, download the new app and replace the old one.
If you installed TurboWarp Desktop from an app store or package manager, download the update from there. Otherwise, manually reinstall the app the same way you installed it.
To update, reinstall the app the same way you installed it.
or
Download installer for Windows 10+ (64-bit)Free code signing provided by SignPath.io, certificate by SignPath Foundation.
If a Windows SmartScreen alert appears, click "More info" then "Run anyways".
By compiling projects to JavaScript, they run 10-100x faster than in Scratch.
Uses significantly less memory and idle CPU usage than Scratch.
Your eyes will thank you.
Replace Scratch's default 30 FPS with any framerate of your choosing or use interpolation. aoki takamasa tujiko noriko 28 rar
Built in packager to convert projects to HTML files, zip files, or applications for Windows, macOS, or Linux.
Change Scratch's default 480x360 stage to any size you like.
Includes new extensions such as gamepad and stretch, and supports loading custom extensions. Takamasa’s production is pristine, clinical, and digital
Remove almost any of Scratch's arbitrary limits, including the 300 clone limit.
Put scripts, costumes, sounds, or entire sprites into the backpack to re-use them later.
Searchable dropdowns, find bar, jump to block definition, folders, block switching, and more. The tension is everything: rigid electronics versus human
Full support for transparency, an improved costume editor, onion skinning, and more.
Enable the cat blocks addon to get cute cat blocks any day of the year.
Takamasa’s production is pristine, clinical, and digital. Sharp stutters, skipping CD logic, and crisp micro-edits. Noriko’s voice, by contrast, is warm, fragile, almost childlike in its melodic drift. The tension is everything: rigid electronics versus human breath. Tracks like “28” (the title cut) and “Fly” feel like walking through a rainy Tokyo alley at 3 AM—lonely, beautiful, and gently broken.
28 is essential listening for fans of Piano (Aoki’s solo work), early Mego, or Fennesz’s Endless Summer . It’s cold yet heartbreaking. If you find the RAR rip today, keep it—not for audio purity, but for the nostalgia of a time when experimental J-pop traveled via ZIP files and forum passwords.
If you came across 28 as a 128kbps or 192kbps RAR file on Soulseek or a now-defunct blogspot back in 2004, you experienced it the way many first did: slightly compressed, looped imperfectly, but utterly mesmerizing. This album wasn't just a collaboration—it was a blueprint for glitch-pop’s emotional core.
Get it from the Microsoft Store to enable automatic updates.
Or download an installer.
TurboWarp Desktop uses a free code signing provided by SignPath.io, certificate by SignPath Foundation.
These versions of the app have the same features but are slower and less secure. Support will be removed at an unknown time in the future. If a Windows SmartScreen alert appears, click "More info" then "Run anyways".
Install from the Mac App Store for automatic updates.
Or download the app manually. Open the .DMG, then drag TurboWarp into Applications. If it tells you that TurboWarp already exists, choose "Replace".
Download for macOS 12 and laterThese versions of the app have the same features but are slower and less secure. Support will be removed at an unknown time in the future. Open the .DMG, then drag TurboWarp into Applications. If it tells you that TurboWarp already exists, choose "Replace".
Takamasa’s production is pristine, clinical, and digital. Sharp stutters, skipping CD logic, and crisp micro-edits. Noriko’s voice, by contrast, is warm, fragile, almost childlike in its melodic drift. The tension is everything: rigid electronics versus human breath. Tracks like “28” (the title cut) and “Fly” feel like walking through a rainy Tokyo alley at 3 AM—lonely, beautiful, and gently broken.
28 is essential listening for fans of Piano (Aoki’s solo work), early Mego, or Fennesz’s Endless Summer . It’s cold yet heartbreaking. If you find the RAR rip today, keep it—not for audio purity, but for the nostalgia of a time when experimental J-pop traveled via ZIP files and forum passwords.
If you came across 28 as a 128kbps or 192kbps RAR file on Soulseek or a now-defunct blogspot back in 2004, you experienced it the way many first did: slightly compressed, looped imperfectly, but utterly mesmerizing. This album wasn't just a collaboration—it was a blueprint for glitch-pop’s emotional core.