Sat Feb 17, 2018 10:32 am
Sat Feb 17, 2018 4:51 am
Assume each post averages about 20 words, original words not quotes, or reposts some are shorter but some are much longer so 20 is a good guess.
Thats 537,000ish words
or at 250 word a page, (Double-spaced, -no pictures and ignoring all the quoting…
or just over 2150 pages…
If this were a novel and published in one volume, it would be the longest single volume novel ever.
I say Novel because of all the people saying “I solved it”
The original book was 226 pages long, or 9 and a half pages written for each page
but really since only 24 pages comprise the images and verses we’ve written almost 90 pages per page
I think that would have made Byron smile.
Sat Feb 17, 2018 7:58 am
JoshCornell1
never looked at chicago…but cleveland and houston def seem the easiest. boston is hard as f**k.
Houston is the easiest yet you left (if you were actually there) empty handed.
Sat Feb 17, 2018 8:42 am
JoshCornell1
the solve and finding the actual spot when shit is no longer there are 2 different things…
Not only was the shit no longer there…..neither were you. Your house of cards has crumbled miserably.
Thu Feb 15, 2018 10:48 pm
JoshCornell1
never looked at chicago…but cleveland and houston def seem the easiest. boston is hard as f**k.
Ok cool just for fun walk me through your solve for cleveland, Start with the basics, how did you solve the puzzle of which verse belonged to Image 4
Thu Feb 15, 2018 11:16 pm
maltedfalcon
Ok cool just for fun walk me through your solve for cleveland, Start with the basics, how did you solve the puzzle of which verse belonged to Image 4
I’m expecting, “Because the Wiki said that, duh! It even had pictures of where to dig. Def the easiest.”
Thu Feb 15, 2018 11:17 pm
JoshCornell1
never looked at chicago…but cleveland and houston def seem the easiest. boston is hard as f**k.
I’m starting to get worried about the Boston casque. Josh’s brand of puzzle solving just might be what it takes to find the one up heyah!
Thu Feb 15, 2018 11:37 pm
meatypuffs
I’m expecting, “Because the Wiki said that, duh! It even had pictures of where to dig. Def the easiest.”
Thu Feb 15, 2018 5:17 pm
Unknown
Unknown:
Thank you for this insightful and revolutionary post.
How’s this for revolutionary? The problem isn’t with the puzzle. The problem is with everybody, and I do mean everybody thinking they know more about the puzzle and the puzzle maker than they really do.
Thu Feb 15, 2018 7:33 pm
JoshCornell1
i dont think gpr’ing that spot will even achieve anything.
I feel I can speak on behalf of the forum when I say this. Take pride in this, because it’s the first time you will have heard it.
“We agree with you”
Thu Feb 15, 2018 7:47 pm
Guardian
I’ve solved puzzles since I was a little kid, and I’ve even created a few. That being said, I’m convinced BP *did* know how to make a puzzle. But, he like all inexperienced puzzle makers, he didn’t realize his clues weren’t as obvious as he thought because they seem more obvious when you know the solution. This is why only two casques have been found after 34 years.
I’ve made a bunch of puzzles for money, including most of the puzzles for Telltale Games’ Puzzle Agent 2.
My take is that Preiss was a publisher, and so sales were his main goal.
So his path was:
Make really obvious general clues, like a long-lat or a major building. This gets people excited: Hey im near that major city and this puzzle seems easy, I should buy the book!
Then make 1-2 pretty easy solves, to make the news and build momentum.
But you don’t want most of them solved quickly, that hurts sales. So make most of the final dig site really hard to do, physically and legally, and give maddeningly obscure clues so many people feel like they are “close”
Wed Feb 14, 2018 3:35 am