Porphyria's Glomschal Challenge

From LSWiki

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Revision as of 21:56, 13 October 2011 (edit)
Esmene (Talk | contribs)
(Getting impatient for someone to solve this.)
← Previous diff
Revision as of 19:30, 14 October 2011 (edit)
Esmene (Talk | contribs)

Next diff →
Line 26: Line 26:
* Man Army, Ram Myna! * Man Army, Ram Myna!
* There aren't as many letters in the decoded message as there are in the cypher. * There aren't as many letters in the decoded message as there are in the cypher.
-* The hint before the last one is an anagram. if you know what it refers to, you should be able to figure out what product the text is an advertisement for.+* The hint before the last one is an anagram. If you know what it refers to, you should be able to figure out what product the text is an advertisement for.
 +* Think roadside advertising.

Revision as of 19:30, 14 October 2011

A Challenge

Porphyria has one too many glomschals! Help her out by solving a puzzle, and taking one off her hands. The challenge: Since glomschals assist in hiding people in plain sight, the challenge is to decypher the following block of cypher text:

NFIIV TMVRVSN TIQXIR DTLHE EXALS RXZ NGVB OIMKP CG YEMGRS TYXFHTL SBOX WGPXB BAUXVO EOPTVJ


A few rules, hints, and other goodness...

  • The plain text is in plain English, relatively standard grammar, with all punctuation removed and should make some sense if properly decoded.
  • You may make as many guesses as you like, but be reasonable. I'll know if you're close or if you're just guessing, and reserve the right to ignore anyone who makes too many silly guesses.
  • The plain text is relatively easy to decode with a pen and paper if you know the rules. It is a relatively simple cypher which can be decoded, and hopefully by somewhat-intuitive methods, not a one-time-pad, a page from the Voynich Manuscript, or any other undecypherable shenanigan. You will not need your Nazi grandmother's Enigma Machine, so put that back in her boudoir where you woke up next to it this morning.
  • I will give hints when I damn well feel like it, and only on here, so don't ask for any, goddamnit, and check back here often.
  • Feel free to work together on this, but there is only one glomschal, so figure out amongst yourselves who gets it. Post-award bickering will be met with slaughter and scavenger hunts.
  • First in-game tell or mud mail to me with the right answer wins. In the event of a tie, I flip a coin. If the coin lands on its edge, I divine the winner via cromniomancy.
  • 10/8/11 2:43 PST - I have checked the code, and I did make some mistakes, although most of it was correct. As I said previously, the original cypher would have been at least mostly-decodeable, but would have seemed to contain spelling mistakes (which it did - my bad). This will teach me to write this shit when I'm sleep-deprived.

FURTHER HINTS:

  • Every letter is significant in decoding the plaintext. There are no 'filler characters' you're not supposed to take into account.
  • It is not a ROT-based cypher.
  • The cypher-to-plain text will not require rearranging the letters as an additional step (the plain text is not an anagram of some middle-step cypher). Basically, only one method was used to encrypt this.
  • If you know something about old advertisements, the message may be familiar to you.
  • An important part of decoding each letter is the letter that comes before it.
  • Man Army, Ram Myna!
  • There aren't as many letters in the decoded message as there are in the cypher.
  • The hint before the last one is an anagram. If you know what it refers to, you should be able to figure out what product the text is an advertisement for.
  • Think roadside advertising.
Personal tools