azurite: (Default)
[personal profile] azurite
After a short afternoon of shopping, I come home to discover an email about a brand new nanoMission! Huzzah! This post assumes you've been through the previous missions and/or nanoMissions, so I shouldn't need to tell you where to go to see your briefing...

After watching the latest briefing, check out the new evidence as provided by The Source. Gee, the folks over at the Cupertino PD sure have a messy evidence locker! What say we clean it up a bit?

Click on the items. Drag a few to your "evidence cubby." If you get lucky, you might see a little piece of paper appear on one. If you'd rather not be lucky, you'd rather be right, then click on the manila envelope on top of your evidence cubby and read the mysterious message therein.

The message seems to be in a sort of code, with numbers like (16) 12 H on a C (also 3 H). What could that mean? Well, given you've got a plethora of objects before you, presumably one of the letters stands for the object's name. For example C = cat, chest, chess, clock... but what does it FIT? Well, there are 12 hours on a clock (also 3 hands)!

If you got lucky, you might have correctly placed one item in its proper cubby and seen the list change from the code version to the full version. This should give you an idea of how the code "sentences" are structured. Remember, they make sense! You should know what 52 C in a D means, after all...

But for the folks that want to breeze through this one, here are the solutions. Remember to drag the item in question to the cubby hole in parentheses.
(1) 6 S on a G = 6 strings on a guitar
(2) 5 F on a G = 5 fingers on a glove (the baseball mitt)
(3) 6 S on a D = 6 sides on a die
(4) 3 L on a T = 3 legs on a tripod (look by a ladder)
(5) 4 T on a F = 4 tines on a fork (it's hidden behind the remote control)
(6) 52 C in a D = 52 cards in a deck
(7) 8 S on a SS = 8 sides on a stop sign
(8) 12 M on a C = 12 months on a calendar (the iCal icon)
(9) 64 S on a CB = 64 squares on a chessboard
(10) 12 B on a T = 12 buttons on a telephone (traditional telephone, not an iPhone!)
(11) 20 N on a DB = 20 numbers on a dartboard
(12) 3.5 I F D = 3.5 inch floppy disk (make sure to find the 3.5" one, not the larger floppy!)
(13) 2 S on a C = 2 sides on a coin (trust me, it's not a condom)
(14) 206 B in a HS = 206 bones in a human skeleton
(15) 35 M F for a C = 35 millimeter film for a camera (find the film roll, not a film camera!)
(16) 12 H on a C (also 3 H) = 12 hours on a clock (also 3 hands)

Once you do, the pieces of paper will enlarge and you will need to assemble them. You can do this one of two ways: align the edges of the paper as best you can (they won't be exact; it's tracing paper, anyway) or you can try and align the letters.

You may also notice a Mainframe bar at the top, saying "WARNING: Device attempting to send message in to past...." You have the opportunity to enter an authorization code, but what is it? Presumably the torn-up paper will reveal the answer.

When you do solve the paper, it will read "Portal Player" but with the first four letters on one line, the next four on the middle line, and the final four on the last line. In other words, your paper assembly will look like this (from top to bottom): Port/al Pl/ayer.



Type it in in your Authorization Code box (with no spaces) and your message will be sent to the past, warning Apple of someone stealing the Click Wheel design!

Huzzah! You'll now have BabelBloX in your Loot, along with Typinator just for checking the nanoMission out!

Congratulations, agents!

 Morning Glow by Mayuko Aoki from FINAL FANTASY X-2 Vocal Collection YUNA (Rating: 0)

January 2016

S M T W T F S
     12
3456789
10111213141516
171819 20212223
24252627282930
31      

Most Popular Tags

Page generated Jan. 3rd, 2026 12:52 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios