If I change or make a picture to be monochromatic that doesn't make it a Rohrschach test.
Comment has been collapsed.
The point is to manipulate the answers, I suppose. I'm on my phone, no idea if the spoiler line reveals what it's for.
Nice idea tho with the changing images. ;)
Comment has been collapsed.
Anger, that stupid alien should not have messed with the human race.
Comment has been collapsed.
521 Comments - Last post 9 minutes ago by bodak1988
389 Comments - Last post 2 hours ago by J1mmyST
227 Comments - Last post 5 hours ago by spodamayn
2,783 Comments - Last post 5 hours ago by TheGreenBox
46 Comments - Last post 9 hours ago by m0r1arty
12 Comments - Last post 9 hours ago by Gamy7
239 Comments - Last post 20 hours ago by y2
177 Comments - Last post 7 minutes ago by OilAce
1,247 Comments - Last post 14 minutes ago by Luacs
545 Comments - Last post 16 minutes ago by Eiion
692 Comments - Last post 20 minutes ago by CBlade
139 Comments - Last post 28 minutes ago by AllTracTurbo
8 Comments - Last post 30 minutes ago by canis39
10 Comments - Last post 32 minutes ago by canis39
So, with my last event being a rather nice success in getting people to come up with stories, I figured it might be fun to make something else that gets people talking. This is more of an event than an actual puzzle, but there is an unbundled reward that people that participate may find themselves being able to enter.
I encourage people to compare their feelings they get when looking at this image. So, if you see a bird, don't just say "Bird", but instead saying something you associate with a bird like "Freedom", or "Soaring". Please stick to one or two word comments.
Too many people that doesn't follow the rules... :( Failed experiment.
Solution:
As many people figured out (and unfortunately wrote, despite the rules saying you should stick to 1 or 2 word comments) the image will change every time you reload it. There are 10 normal ink blot patterns, and one that also includes a GA code. So the trick to beat this puzzle was to reload the image until you found the code.
The idea was for people to write their feelings on what they saw (which people also failed a lot with, and instead wrote the thing they saw, despite me stating that's what you're not supposed to do...), so that people started wondering how others feel a certain way, when you feel something entirely different, and that would serve as a hint that something fishy was going on with the image.
Comment has been collapsed.