I will say there is a bonus two copies of Alt-Frequencies. And this is the only clue that I'm going to give: The fun fact may also be a useful fact.
Comment has been collapsed.
1 Comments - Last post 38 minutes ago by InSpec
15 Comments - Last post 1 hour ago by CutieTheRooster
554 Comments - Last post 1 hour ago by GinotheMan
47,407 Comments - Last post 4 hours ago by Gamy7
2,717 Comments - Last post 4 hours ago by WaxWorm
13 Comments - Last post 12 hours ago by Gramis
1,205 Comments - Last post 15 hours ago by Formidolosus
44 Comments - Last post 13 seconds ago by LightningCount
52 Comments - Last post 16 minutes ago by ZungBang
121 Comments - Last post 32 minutes ago by vinstonsmitt
9 Comments - Last post 49 minutes ago by AceBerg42
588 Comments - Last post 55 minutes ago by Vampus
30,213 Comments - Last post 1 hour ago by tungmapu
8,706 Comments - Last post 1 hour ago by CultofPersonalitea
- 1 -
Decided to make a pretty simple puzzle thing. You just have to complete a jigidi and then a nonogram. The jigidi is up first. It is a 150 piece jigidi. Thereafter, you should get a lin
kto the nonogram, which hopefully shouldn't be too hard.- 2 -
It is a 15x15 nonogram. I haven't actually do
ne it myself yet lol, but it didn't look too bad. We shall see however :P- 3 -
The nonogram will then give you a link to begin the train. It i
sa 5 game train consisting of:- 4 -
Since that is all, time for a fun fact. This is something I had found some time back, but I recently saw something about it again, so here's the down low. Our minds are incredibly skilled at recognizing patterns, and we rely heavily on the context of the sentence and the positioning of the first and last letters of words to make sense of scrambled text. As long as those letters stay in their c
orrect spots, our brains can fill in the blanks andunderstand the words without much trouble. This phenomenon is called "typoglycemia." For example, "Yuo may notiecd taht desptie teh mdidle lteters bieng cmoepltey out of odrer, yuo can raed tihs snetecne wiohtut mcuh dfifcltuy." Pretty cool right?It is level 3 and ends 23 April, end of day.
SOLUTION
I separated the paragraphs distinctly in four. This was because you needed to get four words. These four words are made from the letters in the text of each paragraph that are either: bold, italics, strikethrough, or hidden. I specifically made a combination of 20 letters and did 5 of each in random order to make you think that there was 4 giveaways. But looking at the letters, in order, in each paragraph, we get:
Combining these, we get the sentence, “lniks in inspcet srcoue.” Using the fun fact of typoglycemia we can see that the sentence should say, “links in inspect source.” To inspect source you can click Ctrl + U. In inspect source you search the term, “giveaway,” and the giveaway for Alt-Frequencies will show up. This is a shortcut to the train as it then leads to Bound By Blades. So this was a little shortcut baked in with an additional prize.
I also hid two giveaways for Piczle Adventure in the links of both the nonogram and the jigidi. I would type out what they say, but it is quite clear in the links of each where they are hidden (right at the end). Now obviously not everyone is going to think to look there. So… I made 3 sentences related to puzzles in the jigidi where the U, R, and L are boldened and italicised. Hence, giving URL. I hoped this was enough of an indication to look at the url. Then just made another link in the nonogram cause why wouldn’t you look in that url as well right?
Basically meaning all you really needed to do to access all giveaways was finish the jigida and solve the riddle in the main discussion. While I enjoy nonograms, I know others do not, so I made it doable without using the nono. But you had to be willing to try everything else first in order to see that.
Comment has been collapsed.