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Post by captnkush on Feb 6, 2020 23:46:54 GMT -5
I suspect the correct answer was proposed sometime b4 9/9
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Post by susb8383 on Feb 7, 2020 7:55:38 GMT -5
What makes you say that?
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Post by goldenchild on Feb 7, 2020 9:12:45 GMT -5
Any chance a three digit answer was put forth that is correct?
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Post by TheCoyWonder on Feb 7, 2020 15:54:02 GMT -5
Any chance a three digit answer was put forth that is correct? Could be.
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Post by susb8383 on Feb 9, 2020 21:09:59 GMT -5
Just curious, does anyone have a theory about how "and turn" applies to the answer?
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Post by TheCoyWonder on Feb 9, 2020 21:15:41 GMT -5
I was wondering the same thing.
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Post by razorback on Feb 9, 2020 21:29:18 GMT -5
‘Turn’ is a musical term. Maybe it was used to let us know they were musical notes?
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Post by captnkush on Feb 9, 2020 21:36:47 GMT -5
‘Turn’ is a musical term. Maybe it was used to let us know they were musical notes? .....same conclusion i arrived at...perhaps theres another reason but i dont see it
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Post by findingthetruth on Feb 11, 2020 5:43:41 GMT -5
trying my luck as this hunt again after leaving it for a while, can anyone give me a hint as to how to determine this stanza? I've tried every combo I can think of, with no luck. can anyone confirm if its 3 digits or 4?
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Post by susb8383 on Feb 11, 2020 9:08:52 GMT -5
trying my luck as this hunt again after leaving it for a while, can anyone give me a hint as to how to determine this stanza? I've tried every combo I can think of, with no luck. can anyone confirm if its 3 digits or 4? Re-read the last few weeks of posts on this thread and also on 'Stanza Four of Riddle.' All the pieces are there; you just have to put them together.
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Post by findingthetruth on Feb 11, 2020 13:22:19 GMT -5
thankyou so much, it was the plus 2 where I was going wrong
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Post by susb8383 on Feb 11, 2020 16:56:34 GMT -5
You’re welcome; glad you got it.
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Post by thedutchcoder on May 24, 2020 18:53:34 GMT -5
I actually found something interesting: if this stanza is actually related to chess, then c4 f5 d4 e6 (actually in reverse order) is called a Dutch Defence. d4 is no real match for "No sea legs here", though c6 (sea sick X) is also a stretch imo, but let's assume it's d4. If we convert the letter parts of this sequences from hexadecimal to decimal, we get numbers 192, 240, 208, 224 which resembles an IP address. Here's the interesting bit: I can ping that IP address (it exists!), but it's not a website, so it might be anything really, like the address used by an app or something. It's a bit of a stretch and not super elegant, but I thought I'd share ----- Edit: or am I missing something and this part has been solved?
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Post by susb8383 on May 24, 2020 19:21:29 GMT -5
Yes, this part was solved long ago.
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Post by thedutchcoder on May 24, 2020 19:27:32 GMT -5
Too bad it wasn't posted here lol, any hints to where I should look, I feel like I'm close!
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