These are getting monotonous in trying to figure out what they reference to get a what seems like facts that would require specific knowledge to even guess...
a little early for that I think ... at this stage, mostly just making comments here to compare with what others are getting. There are clues above that relate to how I got here
The only seemingly useful piece of information I can find is from a chemistry forum:
"Slashes ( / ) are used to separate different layers of the device, while colons ( : ) are used to enunciate all separate components in a single layer."
However, I still don't know its relevance to the solve.
I'm just missing the keyword now, but the one I got isn't working, and I'm afraid to hit the cooldown for trying too many false codes. It doesn't seem to be "be" or "c.". Anyone I can check with without trying out codes?
EDIT: Thanks, got the help. Just needed to put it all together
A catalyst acts over and over and over and over. You will know you are on the right track because it reads like the wikipedia article for Catalysis. Keep messing around with different catalysts and it will slowly progress.
I’m also wondering what to do with the extra characters after the colon ... the most obvious ways to interpret it seem to break the pattern for me (that is, I don’t get the 8 letter alphabet)
Also for those stuck on 100 characters in a kind of alphabet with 22 “letters”, are you also stuck with them in the form of the 8 characters from a step before? That is, you don’t really have a normal alphabet? Or do you?
Basically the same thing that you posted about an hour ago. The letters are essentially invented to stand for pairs. I'm looking for a substitution to turn it into English and there doesn't seem to be one.
Comments
Congrats! Any hints?
Ca inspire quelqu'un un code qui ne contient que ça: T Q NA JZ PS ?
not random. you just don't have the complete key.
Is the formula name of C relevant or is it to be taken 'as is' maybe as a key for a method?
Well, what I can say is.. A and B have the same lengths for a reason. And if done correctly, dive into the field catalysts are used in
@Kramushka Can I solve this without a chemistry education / background?
If you can understand what elements are used in C, then your knowledge is even higher than needed
you mean... chemistry?
These are getting monotonous in trying to figure out what they reference to get a what seems like facts that would require specific knowledge to even guess...
They are losing the fun factor, quickly.
definitely have something ... an apparently random jumble of just 8 different letters ... although still confused by the colons
Any hits on how you got to 8 letters...?
So close, I'm left with 100 characters...
i have the same question.
a little early for that I think ... at this stage, mostly just making comments here to compare with what others are getting. There are clues above that relate to how I got here
Similar here ... several hundred of the same 8 letters becomes 200 pairs, which becomes 100 letters?
The only seemingly useful piece of information I can find is from a chemistry forum:
"Slashes ( / ) are used to separate different layers of the device, while colons ( : ) are used to enunciate all separate components in a single layer."
However, I still don't know its relevance to the solve.
Edit: this was a rabbit hole.
I'm just missing the keyword now, but the one I got isn't working, and I'm afraid to hit the cooldown for trying too many false codes. It doesn't seem to be "be" or "c.". Anyone I can check with without trying out codes?
EDIT: Thanks, got the help. Just needed to put it all together
A catalyst acts over and over and over and over. You will know you are on the right track because it reads like the wikipedia article for Catalysis. Keep messing around with different catalysts and it will slowly progress.
Charge your phone!
Did the 100 characters turn out to be relevant to the final solve? They come from an alphabet of 22 letters and the first 9 are different?
I will, I'm going to bed now :P
Those are the right 100 characters, and you're only a few steps away from the passcode
got it! thanks for nice challenge.
I’m also wondering what to do with the extra characters after the colon ... the most obvious ways to interpret it seem to break the pattern for me (that is, I don’t get the 8 letter alphabet)
I still feel a very long way off. :-(
Same ... I was starting to think I might be one step away and was looking for 13ar
Also for those stuck on 100 characters in a kind of alphabet with 22 “letters”, are you also stuck with them in the form of the 8 characters from a step before? That is, you don’t really have a normal alphabet? Or do you?
Basically the same thing that you posted about an hour ago. The letters are essentially invented to stand for pairs. I'm looking for a substitution to turn it into English and there doesn't seem to be one.
Could you give a hint about the other catalysts? I've tried with the lore and many other ideas, but I'm totally lost.
solved, ouch, doubt that will improve my times.