#binary morse and going by the first letter of each word?? cool got it no worries
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
in other news ive come to the realization that i'm a complete fraud. girl help i don't know shit about decoding who let me near slenderverse and gravity falls im so confused
#lane speaks#binary morse and going by the first letter of each word?? cool got it no worries#but a caesar cipher?? vigenere and other ones ive heard of but dont what they even mean????? wtf??#its mostly i have not one clue where to start or how to find these things#does anyone have an idiot's guide to decoding or something equivalent
3 notes
¡
View notes
Text
Nine Eyes TV Puzzle Solutions
Hey, if youâre a fan of AI: the Somnium Files, you may have heard how the puzzle siteâs ARG got broken very quickly to reveal the url for something called âAI Nirvanaâ, which is possibly a new AI files game.
While Iâve seen people post the password, I havenât seen anyone break down the individual puzzles and their solutions, so Iâll do that down below.Â
Update while writing this:Â Tumblr user dead-batterie has a breakdown of the puzzles up as well, and the differences in our lines of reasoning is really cool, since at a point I started approaching the puzzles with the idea that they were mainly targeted at Japanese speakers, but turns out the puzzles can be solved by both an English and Japanese audience!Â
Please scroll past if you want still want to solve the puzzle yourself!
Eye 1
Initially, I thought that the solution was in the red numbers (like entering the day of the week theyâre associated with). But, looking at the black numbers, thereâs a trend.
9 - 7 = 2
16 - 14 = 2
and etc.
The solution here isnât two, though. Instead, itâs ni (ăŤ) for every 2 days missing.
Eye 2
This one was bruteforced (fit in letters after solving other puzzles), but according to dead-batterieâs explanation, itâs a Rosicrucian for rva!Â
(Full disclosure I thought it was an upside-down, stylized rva.)
Eye 3
Like Eye 1, this puzzle is rooted in Japanese. Take the Japanese term for 1,000 (ä¸ĺ) [ăăŁăă] and remove the kanji for 1, ä¸. You get ĺ (ă) for n.
Eye 4
This one is pretty simple if youâre familiar with American Morse code. Itâs the letter a, so we currently have the word nirvana.
Eye 5
This one... Yeah, I fully bruteforced. The solution here is in, but I donât know why. Like the rva puzzle, this one mainly happened after getting the other puzzles.
Update: apparently itâs the in from [rainbow], as dead-batterie explains!
Eye 6
Like the Morse puzzle, this one should be simple if you recognize binary. Converting this to text gives you the letter i.
Eye 7
This is another one that was somewhat bruteforced, so my reasoning may be off, but look at the arrow. At first, I thought this was a gauge of some sort, but it looks much more like a clock.
Itâs 12 oâ clock.
The kanji for 12 is ĺäş. So... ti?
Eye 8
While one may jump to thinking this is a cipher, look at the last word. [LCHEMIS]. Looks like alchemist. Now look at where the A and T in alchemist would go in respect to the other words. Itâs a perfect match for each one, giving us:
ACT
ALERT
ADDICT
ACCOUNT
ALCHEMIST
So you put in at for the answer.
Eye 9Â
Initially, I thought this puzzle was asking me to Caesar shift the above eye. Turns out, though, itâs a lot simpler.
Use a Caesar shift decoder and set it to encode shift 4. If you enter in âeraâ you get ive.
Our final answer is nirvana initiative, which takes you to a clock counting down to... Something. Which weâll find out very soon.
#nine eyes tv#spike chunsoft#og#what's better than this... uploading an explanation 30 minutes before the reveal
9 notes
¡
View notes
Note
Hi hewwo bby girl yk who this isâŁď¸ could u write me a saburo scenario where his crush confesses to him through smol puzzles thankiesâŁď¸
SCHOOL AND WORK IMMERSION IS A BITCH I AM SO SORRY THIS TOOK SO LONG
Anyway, I hope you enjoy this! Thanks mom for the request!
Saburo wasnât sure when it started, but he remembered all of the puzzles he found in his locker.
1.
âEh?â Saburoâs classmate sat next to him. âWhatâs that youâre fidgeting with?â
Saubro cocked his head. âIâm not sure?â He was holding some sort of Rubikâs cube with a letter written on the center square of each side and a heart. Of course he solved it already, but the letters made no sense.
I mean, they formed a word, but Saburo couldnât figure out why the letters R-H-U-S-C formed the word CRUSH (and there was a heart).
âI think you might have a secret admirer.â His classmate snatched the cube out of Saburoâs hands and studied it. Saburo felt the irrational desire to take it back.
âWho would admire me?â Saburo mumbled and took it back.
The classmate shrugged. âNot sure.â She smiled at him. âMaybe someone who finds you incredibly smart.â
âThat narrows it down.â Saburo said sarcastically.
âAnd cute maybe.â She looked away, blushing slightly, but Saburo failed to notice this because he was still studying the cube.
âIâll figure this out.â Saburo said, twisting the cube again. âShe didnât even leave a note.â
âMaybe she wants it to be a mystery?â
âI guess? But I want to find out who she is.â He looked up at his classmate then cleared his throat and then looked away.
âHopefully.â She replied.
2.
âThis code really makes no sense whatsoever.â Saburo scratched his head. âIâve really tried everything.â
âLetter to alphabet?â She took her seat beside his again for homeroom. Apparently, Saburo had found another puzzle in his locker.
âYep.â
âAtbash?â
âYep.â
âBinary?â
âThereâs not enough zeroes and ones.â
âHmmâŚ.â She sighed, a kind of resigned sigh really and she opened her book. Her eyes widened. âShit.â
Saburo looked up at her. âWhat?â
She slammed her head into the book. âHow long did it take you to do the homework on Caesar?â
âCaesar?â Saburo thought to last week when he finished it. âUm⌠three hours?â
âPerfect. I can do it in one.â She sighed and leaned back in her chair.
âCaesarâŚâ He bit his lip and stared at the paper (which was burned and smelled like coffee, he figured his admirer was artistic as well as smart and extra), he tried something and it clicked into place. He grabbed the hand of his classmate and smiled at her. âYouâre a genius!â
âEh?â
âCaesarâs cipher!â
âThree letters back?â
âYeah!â Saburo slapped his forehead. âItâs so simple why didnât I think of it?â
She squeezed his hand. âSometimes the hardest things to see are right in front of you.â
He smiled at her and looked at their hands that weâre still touching. He blushed slightly and let go. âThank you.â
âAnytime.â
He set to work on the code, and in no time he deciphered it. It was a short poem, a haiku if you will.
You make me happy
When you smile brightly at me
Next time youâll know me
âNext time youâll know me?â Saburo cocked his head. âOh my. Sheâll tell me soon?â
âI guess?â
Saburo looked absolutely excited. âI hope itâs not too easy though. This is actually kind of fun.â
âIâm glad you like it.â She mumbled under her breath, softly enough so Saburo wonât hear. âAnyway.â She said louder. âHope you find out who that is soon.â
âMe too!â
3.
What Saburo said about it not being easy, well it definitely wasnât.
Instead of having just one puzzle in his locker, he had a map of the school (which each location was written in morse or binary code) and he had to go to the places in a specific order (thankfully it was just a dotted line and arrows.
There was a note that told him to do it after class only, so that no one would really interrupt him.
Saburo couldnât sit still the whole day and barely paid attention in class as he was trying to glean any hints from the map. (Of course he got none of the sort.)
âYouâre not paying attention.â The girl beside him whisper-teased.
âThis is⌠quite exciting.â He showed her the map.
âIs that binary?â
âYeah.â He translated the locations just for the sake of it. âAnd morse too. Itâs kind of cool how she mixed them up.â
She smiled. âReally?â
âKeeps me thinking.â He tapped his pencil to his lips.
âMr. Yamada.â The teacher called and Saburo flinched. âIf you would be so kind to answer the question on the board.â
âBusted.â She teased, which got her a small slap on the arm as retribution.
Later that day, Saburo stood in front of his locker, where the map said where he should start.
The first stop was the library, where he found a riddle (written in navy flag code) which told him to go find a book in the history section.
The Dewey Decimal code was written in binary on the paper.
He flipped through said book (which he found in the childrenâs section of the history section) and found a clue for the puzzle in the next location.
He brought the clue to the gym and he found five basketballs in a row. He would have to pick the right one or else he wouldnât be able to pass. (Well logically, of course the gym doors wouldnât be locked because that would put both him and his admirer in a stint, but it gave him thrill to imagine if it didnât open.)
Kind of like his favourite Harry Potter moment, you know, the one with Hermione and the potions. Harry could have died if she picked the wrong one, but she really got through the riddle and solved it. He was a huge Harry Potter nerd, and he had to appreciate his admirer to making something of the sort.
He picked the third basketball from the right and it was attached to a super thin string, If he had noticed it before, it wouldâve been a lot easier.
âYes!â He shouted and his voice echoed in the empty gym. He blushed, even if no one was watching. He was behaving like a child who just got candy as a prize.
He pulled on the basketball and pulled the rope. It extended to the bleachers and at the end of it, Â another paper was apparently attached.
Saburo was actually enjoying this and was excited when he picked it up.
The code was written in morse again, plus the Caesar cipher. The riddle said that it was the last puzzle he had to solve.
The next location was⌠Saburo stopped right outside the door. His classroom? He stepped inside and found a note on the teacherâs table. It was just a sequence of numbers and arrows.
3 up, 2 left, 4 right, 7 up, 9 down, 1 left
And another note written at the bottom, Saburo sat down on the teacherâs table and translated it from Morse to numbers to letters.
Start from the back. Face the board. Opposites attract.
Saburo picked up the paper with the numbers and the arrows and moved to the back of the classroom.
âTheyâre steps.â He mumbled and started. It didnât make sense though, because his classroom didnât really fit that many- oh. Opposites. Saburo restarted and this time it made sense.
He found himself in front of the seat beside his. âWhat?â
There was a post-it taped to the table.
He picked it up, and written in his seat mateâs handwriting were two words.
âFound me.â
Saburo whirled around to find his classmate at the door. She entered so quietly he didnât notice.
âHi.â She said timidly. Her face was sporting a blush and she chewed on her lip nervously as she swayed on the spot. âUmâŚâ
Saburo pocketed the note and slowly walked to her. âYou?â
âMe.â
He put his hands in his pockets nervously. âI⌠uh⌠youâreâŚâ He scratched the back of his head. âFun?â
She blushed. âSorry. Iâm not good with words. This was how I talk to you. We bond over puzzles and math andâŚâ She turned redder. âI guess I started liking you because we had a lot in commonâŚ. And that youâre really smart and cuteandfunnyandreallyishouldstoptalkingohmygodimnotshuttingup-â
Saburoâs hands were shaking but he grabbed her hand with one of his. âNo itâs okay.â He smiled a little. âEh⌠uhmmmâŚ.â He stayed quiet for what seemed like forever. âI like you too.â
Her head snapped up. âReally?â
He nodded. âI really like the riddles. They were really fun and smartâŚâ He looked away from her, he hoped his hands werenât shaking that bad. âUm⌠c-can IâŚ.â He swallowed. âCan IâŚ. ki-â He inhaled sharply. âTake you out?â He mentally smacked himself.
âNow?â She blushed and tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. âI⌠um sure.â
Saburo smiled nervously and opened the classroom door.
#hypnosis mic#hypmic#hypnosis microphone#busterbros#buster bros#saburo yamada#riddles#fluff#saburo x reader
58 notes
¡
View notes