Return to Unfiction unforum
 a.r.g.b.b 
FAQ FAQ   Search Search 
 
Welcome!
New users, PLEASE read these forum guidelines. New posters, SEARCH before posting and read these rules before posting your killer new campaign. New players may also wish to peruse the ARG Player Tutorial.

All users must abide by the Terms of Service.
Website Restoration Project
This archiving project is a collaboration between Unfiction and Sean Stacey (SpaceBass), Brian Enigma (BrianEnigma), and Laura E. Hall (lehall) with
the Center for Immersive Arts.
Announcements
This is a static snapshot of the
Unfiction forums, as of
July 23, 2017.
This site is intended as an archive to chronicle the history of Alternate Reality Games.
 
The time now is Tue Nov 12, 2024 5:44 am
All times are UTC - 4 (DST in action)
View posts in this forum since last visit
View unanswered posts in this forum
Calendar
 Forum index » Archive » Archive: The Art of the Heist » The Art of the Heist: Puzzles
[SOLVED] gebrochen pics {SD 3/games/gebrochen jpgs}
View previous topicView next topic
Page 1 of 2 [17 Posts]   Goto page: 1, 2 Next
Author Message
rowan
Unfictologist

Joined: 12 Apr 2004
Posts: 1966

[SOLVED] gebrochen pics {SD 3/games/gebrochen jpgs}

Pieced together "crossword puzzle" from the gebrochen pictures.

So far I have found the following phrases starting from the bottom T

"Thoughts stray and so do you"

"There is a little mystic clock no human eye hath seen that beateth on from morning until [nee]"

You can also get "out today" on the left hand vertical branch and "some/end" on the lower right hand horiztonal branch.

Edit: title clarification -- Rowan
gebrochen-together.png
 Description   gebrochen pasted together
 Filesize   18.05KB
 Viewed   616 Time(s)

gebrochen-together.png

_________________
follow @arg_deaddrop on twitter

PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2005 1:37 am
Last edited by rowan on Fri May 20, 2005 10:24 pm; edited 3 times in total
 View user's profile
 Back to top 
Helper
Guest


According to http://www.wisdomportal.com/Numbers/Notes-MeditationsOn52.html,

Quote:
Emily used "mystic" three times in her letters, most notably in a letter to her brother Austin: "the little mystic clock, no human eye hath seen which ticketh on and ticketh on, from morning until e'en." (Letter #60, Oct. 30, 1851)


"Emily", of course, is Emily Dickinson.

That's pretty close to "little mystic clock no human eye hath seen that beateth on from morning until nee". The differences, obviously, are "that beateth on" replaced "which ticketh on and ticketh on", and "e'en" is backwards.

But I'd verify that quote from another source before basing any important decisions on it - the guy who wrote that page seems like a nutjob.

Also, at the top, the two unused fragments can form the words "on" and "task". A bit of a stretch, I know...

PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2005 4:20 am
 Back to top 
SMG3er
Veteran

Joined: 20 Apr 2005
Posts: 134

Re: [PUZZLE] gebrochen picture {614.zip/gebrochen.jpgs}

And for what it's worth, Gebrochen is German for "broken."

PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2005 4:56 am
 View user's profile
 Back to top 
Cookster
Veteran


Joined: 03 Apr 2005
Posts: 99
Location: Fresh out of the oven

Re: [PUZZLE] gebrochen picture {614.zip/gebrochen.jpgs}

rowan72 wrote:

You can also get "out today" on the left hand vertical branch and "some/end" on the lower right hand horiztonal branch.


Just wondering if that might be "so mend", given the "broken" connection

PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2005 9:57 am
 View user's profile
 Back to top 
rowan
Unfictologist

Joined: 12 Apr 2004
Posts: 1966

Re: [PUZZLE] gebrochen picture {614.zip/gebrochen.jpgs}

Cookster wrote:
Just wondering if that might be "so mend", given the "broken" connection


Could very well be - I was doing this at 1 this morning so who knows how clearly I was thinking Very Happy
_________________
follow @arg_deaddrop on twitter

PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2005 10:41 am
 View user's profile
 Back to top 
GateKeeper
Decorated

Joined: 22 Apr 2005
Posts: 156

Maybe instead of focusing on the letters which are used to make phrases, we should focus on those which aren't used and see if they can make something else?

the 'unusued' letters are;

Code:
KSOYADOTTUSETOHSOMEND


Lots of anagram potential there. I'm thinking it might be something that starts 'DO YOU SEE'
gebrochen.JPG
 Description   
 Filesize   42.53KB
 Viewed   413 Time(s)

gebrochen.JPG


PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2005 4:21 pm
 View user's profile
 Back to top 
GateKeeper
Decorated

Joined: 22 Apr 2005
Posts: 156

Upon further review, many of the areas which have unused letters can be rearranged to spell words.

TODAY is very clear in the upper left,
TUES can be formed with those unused letters and the grouping to the right
DEMONS is fairly obvious in the lower right
HOT in the middle
the rest make up SPOOKS

Maybe it's nothing, but the fact that each section seems to make a word seemed interesting to me.

PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2005 4:34 pm
 View user's profile
 Back to top 
hamatoyoshi
Veteran

Joined: 02 Aug 2004
Posts: 127

GateKeeper wrote:
Maybe instead of focusing on the letters which are used to make phrases, we should focus on those which aren't used and see if they can make something else?


I had considered this idea and played with it a bit; however, I used the "root" (where the unused branches connect to the phrases) as well.

For example, I took "top" that attaches to beateth, "ask" from that, and "no" from seen, as well as "out today".

I took a bit of liberty with the "no" and "out today" to get "none" and "ut today", and I pasted the result together to get "ask-none-to p-ut today", but I could not figure out a way to integrate "yes" from mystic, "hto" from thought and "some end".

Hopefully that makes some sense to whomever is reading this.

PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2005 4:35 pm
 View user's profile
 Back to top 
hamatoyoshi
Veteran

Joined: 02 Aug 2004
Posts: 127

GateKeeper wrote:
Upon further review, many of the areas which have unused letters can be rearranged to spell words.

TODAY is very clear in the upper left,
TUES can be formed with those unused letters and the grouping to the right
DEMONS is fairly obvious in the lower right
HOT in the middle
the rest make up SPOOKS

Maybe it's nothing, but the fact that each section seems to make a word seemed interesting to me.


Or "OUT SPOOKETH DEMONS TODAY"? That would be an anagram that uses everything once.

PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2005 4:38 pm
 View user's profile
 Back to top 
GateKeeper
Decorated

Joined: 22 Apr 2005
Posts: 156

hamatoyoshi wrote:
GateKeeper wrote:
Upon further review, many of the areas which have unused letters can be rearranged to spell words.

TODAY is very clear in the upper left,
TUES can be formed with those unused letters and the grouping to the right
DEMONS is fairly obvious in the lower right
HOT in the middle
the rest make up SPOOKS

Maybe it's nothing, but the fact that each section seems to make a word seemed interesting to me.


Or "OUT SPOOKETH DEMONS TODAY"? That would be an anagram that uses everything once.


Spook out the demons today

PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2005 4:57 pm
 View user's profile
 Back to top 
johnny5
Entrenched

Joined: 17 Aug 2004
Posts: 995
Location: Elysian Fields

nm

PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2005 4:59 pm
 View user's profile
 Back to top 
Kythen
Boot

Joined: 11 May 2005
Posts: 22

How about "Today spooks the demons out"? The other guesses were missing the third "s" and this makes some sense as a potential riddle. I've already tried answers like All Saints' Day and Easter, but no luck yet.

PostPosted: Fri May 13, 2005 1:58 am
 View user's profile AIM Address
 Back to top 
nhansard
Decorated

Joined: 07 Apr 2005
Posts: 159

To go a completely different direction... The origional images are not 2 color. It's possible that there is some information hidden in the not quite black and not quite white sections. It's also possible that it's just artifacts of the JPEG encoding process, but someone may want to look into it. I made a poor attempt with the fill tool in paint. It got messed up when i saved the image, but there are non-matching pixels in the images...
gebrochen19(blue).JPG
 Description   
 Filesize   3.65KB
 Viewed   2128 Time(s)

gebrochen19(blue).JPG


PostPosted: Fri May 13, 2005 4:59 pm
 View user's profile MSN Messenger
 Back to top 
ShadowRuleZ
Boot

Joined: 17 May 2005
Posts: 47

I wonder if it's 20 seperate words, maybe just the letters that are used in each individual image? I'll play with that for a bit and let you know if it works.

PostPosted: Tue May 17, 2005 8:00 pm
 View user's profile
 Back to top 
CDub
Boot


Joined: 08 Apr 2005
Posts: 59
Location: St. Louis

Aren't the .kgb files in this folder opened by Kremlin?
Has anyone tried to open these files?
_________________
The Art of the Heist | bitPimps

PostPosted: Wed May 18, 2005 12:25 am
 View user's profile Visit poster's website
 Back to top 
Display posts from previous:   Sort by:   
Page 1 of 2 [17 Posts]   Goto page: 1, 2 Next
View previous topicView next topic
 Forum index » Archive » Archive: The Art of the Heist » The Art of the Heist: Puzzles
Jump to:  

You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
You cannot attach files in this forum
You can download files in this forum
You cannot post calendar events in this forum



Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group