1.11.01 Intense Secrets

From DoctorWhen
Revision as of 21:31, 25 November 2011 by 69.181.102.58 (talk) (Puzzle Solution)

Order

Usable anywhere in Act I or Act II; intended to be the first optional puzzle given to Journalist teams.

Status

::MOCKUP-READY::

Location

Anywhere

Type

Optional Puzzle

Plot Setup

Wherever the players are in the plot, the time machine is having more problems.

Props

Two sheets of paper.

Plot Point to Convey

None

Short Description

An pulp science fiction story written by Doctor When/Professor Chronos is discovered in the past.

Detailed Description

After the accident, a scan of the historical record discovers a 1930s pulp science fiction story written by Dr. When or Professor Chronos (depending on whether the puzzle is delivered in Act I or II). Perhaps the Doctor/Professor hid a message in it!

This puzzle is intended to engage the skills that a team of journalists are likely to have.

Puzzle Answer

CHECK FERMI DECOUPLERS


Puzzle Solution

- All verbs in the story have past, present, or future tense (time).

- For each sentence, count the number of verbs in past, present, and future tense (time), and form a three-digits ternary number, with the past verbs forming the 9's digit, the present verbs the 3's digit, and the future verbs the 1's digit.

- (Sentences end if and only if a period, question mark, or exclamation point appears.)

- Verb counts are as follows (format is past/present/future): - Paragraph 1: (202,022,100,200,011) - Paragraph 2: (110,012,202,202,012,200) - Paragraph 3: (001,020,202,012,200) - Paragraph 4: (010,120,111,111,001,201) - This translates to THIRDLETTERAFTERCOMMAS. - Reading the third letter after each comma (not counting spaces or punctuation) gives CHECKFERMIDECOUPLERS.

Budget

None

Credits

Initial concept by Allen Cohn, revision and execution by Erik Stuart

Manager

Erik Stuart

Hints

- If the players are completely stuck, remind them that the last part of the About the Author section says that the author worked really hard on the title - maybe that contains a clue. - If they're still stuck, note that the lab computer has done a grammar analysis and, strangely, there are no participles, gerunds, infinitives, or other verbal forms - just regular verbs. - If they're looking at verb tenses but are trying to put them in groups of three (or something similar), remind them that the About the Author section says something about working carefully on each individual sentence. Maybe the verbs are grouped by sentence... - It's possible that some teams may not know enough, or know too much, about verb tenses. All verbs in this story appear (are meant to be) either in past, present, or future TIME, and forms such as "will succeed" and contractions such as "I'll kill" are generally considered part of the same verb. Aspects are irrelevant - "he ran" and "he was running" both count as past verbs. - It's also possible that there may some confusion about what constitutes a sentence, especially within quotes (or in the sentences describing the sign). The demarcations here are simple - a sentence ends whenever a period, exclamation point, or question mark appear. - Since there are three tenses (times) - past, present, future - could that suggest a ternary code? - Finally, teams may be looking at verb tenses and sentences correctly and be thinking about ternary, but be stuck on the idea of "past = 0, present = 1, ...". Remind them that a good ternary code not only uses three values (0, 1, 2), but also has three digits/places. Maybe the three tenses correspond to digits/places (9's place, 3's place, 1's place) instead of actual numerals (0, 1, 2).

Response to Correct Answer

"Check the Fermi decouplers? Let's see... wow, good thing we checked them! They were about to blow, and no good can come of blown Fermi decouplers. Okay, it looks like the machine is running more smoothly now. Okay, now we need you to [insert next step here]."

To Do

Final internal playtest, or simply verify final mockup

Other Notes