Difference between revisions of "Talk:Miss Me? puzzle"

From LGPedia
Jump to: navigation, search
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
I'm just wondering how anyone could possibly solve that puzzle... [[User:71.224.243.78|71.224.243.78]] 23:45, 6 February 2007 (CST)
 
I'm just wondering how anyone could possibly solve that puzzle... [[User:71.224.243.78|71.224.243.78]] 23:45, 6 February 2007 (CST)
 +
 +
:I agree with [[Special:Contributions/71.224.243.78|he who refuses to login]] to an account.  The puzzle is essentially unsolvable.  Why Four Square and not the more common expression "square 1" or 2 as in "2-square cipher" or "sum of 2 squares"?  Why would RIP Stephen refer to his age of 34 and not 35 the year he died, or 31 the year he actually died, or 73 because he's buried in Acts 7:3, or 83 as in August 3 his feast day, or 1 since he's the first martyr?  And since when is lust the 7th?  It sure as crap wasn't when I had to read Dante's Divine Comedy.  It was the first.  And if it was first in Dante, you can be sure it was first when Pope Gregory created 'em.  My assumption is that they figure out parts of the puzzle, but that a puppet of the gamemaster feeds them the rest of the answer, either that or they just call dozens of different numbers until they get a message.  818-574-8347 is no more logical than 818-571-8831 or any of a hundred other combos.--[[User:JayHenry|JayHenry]] 12:26, 7 February 2007 (CST)

Revision as of 18:26, 7 February 2007

I'm just wondering how anyone could possibly solve that puzzle... 71.224.243.78 23:45, 6 February 2007 (CST)

I agree with he who refuses to login to an account. The puzzle is essentially unsolvable. Why Four Square and not the more common expression "square 1" or 2 as in "2-square cipher" or "sum of 2 squares"? Why would RIP Stephen refer to his age of 34 and not 35 the year he died, or 31 the year he actually died, or 73 because he's buried in Acts 7:3, or 83 as in August 3 his feast day, or 1 since he's the first martyr? And since when is lust the 7th? It sure as crap wasn't when I had to read Dante's Divine Comedy. It was the first. And if it was first in Dante, you can be sure it was first when Pope Gregory created 'em. My assumption is that they figure out parts of the puzzle, but that a puppet of the gamemaster feeds them the rest of the answer, either that or they just call dozens of different numbers until they get a message. 818-574-8347 is no more logical than 818-571-8831 or any of a hundred other combos.--JayHenry 12:26, 7 February 2007 (CST)