Shady business in the local paper
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I work as a delivery man for our local newspaper and noticed something that has my alarm bells ringing. The embassy of Warfaretania has ordered exactly nine issues of our paper, from December 1 through December 9. While it's possible that the officials of that faraway nation simply have great interest in our local news, I find it much more likely that there's some shady spy stuff going on in the newspaper's office. Can you figure it out?
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up vote
19
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favorite
I work as a delivery man for our local newspaper and noticed something that has my alarm bells ringing. The embassy of Warfaretania has ordered exactly nine issues of our paper, from December 1 through December 9. While it's possible that the officials of that faraway nation simply have great interest in our local news, I find it much more likely that there's some shady spy stuff going on in the newspaper's office. Can you figure it out?
wordplay enigmatic-puzzle knowledge visual story
add a comment |
up vote
19
down vote
favorite
up vote
19
down vote
favorite
I work as a delivery man for our local newspaper and noticed something that has my alarm bells ringing. The embassy of Warfaretania has ordered exactly nine issues of our paper, from December 1 through December 9. While it's possible that the officials of that faraway nation simply have great interest in our local news, I find it much more likely that there's some shady spy stuff going on in the newspaper's office. Can you figure it out?
wordplay enigmatic-puzzle knowledge visual story
I work as a delivery man for our local newspaper and noticed something that has my alarm bells ringing. The embassy of Warfaretania has ordered exactly nine issues of our paper, from December 1 through December 9. While it's possible that the officials of that faraway nation simply have great interest in our local news, I find it much more likely that there's some shady spy stuff going on in the newspaper's office. Can you figure it out?
wordplay enigmatic-puzzle knowledge visual story
wordplay enigmatic-puzzle knowledge visual story
asked 11 hours ago
jafe
15.3k37152
15.3k37152
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add a comment |
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
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up vote
9
down vote
Very partial answer -- quotes of the day
Three letters in my name have I - A.Cecine
GOT
Not one's an A or E or Y - B.St.Pasun
(true)
My first two -- bested by AI - C.Indice
GO (AlphaGo)
My last two work till they're bled dry - D.Enfait
OT (overtime)
Add A, still best though years go by - E.Cestun
GOAT (greatest of all time)
Or add an H, hair black I dye - F.Haren
GOTH (black clothes, too)
Add two, I go with ship, town, ly - G.Grou
GHOST
Or maybe stare with prejudiced eye - H.Gedes
BIGOT
One who plays me will win or die. - I.Ole
Game of Thrones
There remain
the initials, which just go A-I and (I guess) don't have much extra content to them; and the names, which I'm sure are informative but I don't yet understand. (The initials may or may not want to be included.)
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
Partial Answer:
Observation 1:
the logos on the top left corner of each piece of newspaper can be combined ton form this, which is the coat of arms of Lower Silesia, Poland. Silesia-"ia"=Siles:
Observation 2:
The question mark on Dec 3 is it (country code for Italy), where the six pairs of alphabets are the country codes for France (fr), Switzerland (ch), Austria (at), Slovenia (si), Vatican (va), and San Marino (sm)
1
Your observations are a superset of mine, though, so I'm clearing my answer to de-clutter the thread. Nice job!
– George Menoutis
10 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
Partial:
The picture in no. 5 is the seal of Paraguay. Paraguay minus RH2O (R[WATER/AGUA]) is PAY.
also:
the double letters in the bold names in each article spell: ONE MORE DEAD END
, which probably does not help. ;)
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
Partial (non)-answer:
Concatenating the last names of the different authors of the Quote of the day, we get
CecinePasunIndiceEnfaitCestunHarenGrouGedéSolé, which gives: Ceci n'est pas un indice, en fait c'est un hareng rouge, désolé and in english,
This is not a clue, it is a red herring, sorry
which is indeed not even a partial answer, but it's a dead end worth mentioning in order to prevent falling into it.
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
Another partial findings:
The fourth image
shows the country of Benin and Benin City, which is located in Benin's neighbour country Nigeria. The signs are hebrew for "ben", so the solution for this picture is in. (thanks to @ablerks)
The fifth picture
shows the SI prefixes. The missing one is G.
The seventh picture
could be a reference to the MI6 agents 001 to 007. Their boss is M. (thanks to @NudgeNudge)
The eigth picture
refers to presidents on the dollar bills and US states. The letters are the abbreviation of the state where the capital has the same name as the president on the bill. Lincoln is the capital of Nebraska (NE), and the red arrow indicates to read this backwards, which gives en. (thanks to @Gareth McCaughan)
The ninth picture
displays TRACK - RACK = T. (thanks to @Gareth McCaughan)
Putting together these with @DaurenYermenov's first two pictures' solutions, @OmegaKrypton's solutions for the third picture and @ablerks's sixth picture solution you get
Aw-a-it-in-g pay-m-en-t
1
You're right. The signs in the fourth image are rot13(Uroerj sbe Ora).
– ablerks
6 hours ago
1
I believe the seventh image could refer to rot13(Wnzrf Obaq'f obff (Ntrag mrebmrebfrira), Z), which would fit your solution.
– NudgeNudge
6 hours ago
2
I think the last is TRACK - RACK = T.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
6 hours ago
3
And it's in no way a surprise that the other one is EN (Lincoln -> Nebraska -> NE -> EN) but I don't quite see how it works. Lincoln (capital of Nebraska) is the guy on the $5 bill. But Jackson (capital of Mississipi) is on the $20, not the $10, and the guy on the $10 is not Columbus (capital of Ohio).
– Gareth McCaughan♦
6 hours ago
1
@GarethMcCaughan Augh, that one's on me. Turns out I was looking at 1914 banknotes or something... I'll fix the clue once I get to an actual computer.
– jafe
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
up vote
4
down vote
Partial:
First picture is the Japanese WA (わ) backwards (and with 2 shadows):
Second is the A chord on the guitar.
So we get either AW - A or AWAWAW - A
New contributor
Good find! Add @OmegaKryptons second observation and you get rot13(njnvg).
– Christoph
8 hours ago
@DaurenYermenov Hello and welcome to PSE. Please hide your answers in spoilers using the >! prefix in the beginning of the lines.
– rhsquared
8 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
Partial: (with some help from @GarethMcCaughan
It looks like all the latin names are misspelled. So far I discovered some of the differences which might contain hidden text. Starting with the top image here is what I found so far:
1. r
2. e a
3. d y
4. f o
5. r d
6. e l
7. i
8. v e
9. r y
which reads "Ready for delivery"
Also the first 3 pictures give us:
AW + A + IT = AWAIT
1
Unsurprisingly #6 is missing EL.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
10 hours ago
1
And #3 is missing DY. So that message is pretty clear.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
10 hours ago
add a comment |
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
9
down vote
Very partial answer -- quotes of the day
Three letters in my name have I - A.Cecine
GOT
Not one's an A or E or Y - B.St.Pasun
(true)
My first two -- bested by AI - C.Indice
GO (AlphaGo)
My last two work till they're bled dry - D.Enfait
OT (overtime)
Add A, still best though years go by - E.Cestun
GOAT (greatest of all time)
Or add an H, hair black I dye - F.Haren
GOTH (black clothes, too)
Add two, I go with ship, town, ly - G.Grou
GHOST
Or maybe stare with prejudiced eye - H.Gedes
BIGOT
One who plays me will win or die. - I.Ole
Game of Thrones
There remain
the initials, which just go A-I and (I guess) don't have much extra content to them; and the names, which I'm sure are informative but I don't yet understand. (The initials may or may not want to be included.)
add a comment |
up vote
9
down vote
Very partial answer -- quotes of the day
Three letters in my name have I - A.Cecine
GOT
Not one's an A or E or Y - B.St.Pasun
(true)
My first two -- bested by AI - C.Indice
GO (AlphaGo)
My last two work till they're bled dry - D.Enfait
OT (overtime)
Add A, still best though years go by - E.Cestun
GOAT (greatest of all time)
Or add an H, hair black I dye - F.Haren
GOTH (black clothes, too)
Add two, I go with ship, town, ly - G.Grou
GHOST
Or maybe stare with prejudiced eye - H.Gedes
BIGOT
One who plays me will win or die. - I.Ole
Game of Thrones
There remain
the initials, which just go A-I and (I guess) don't have much extra content to them; and the names, which I'm sure are informative but I don't yet understand. (The initials may or may not want to be included.)
add a comment |
up vote
9
down vote
up vote
9
down vote
Very partial answer -- quotes of the day
Three letters in my name have I - A.Cecine
GOT
Not one's an A or E or Y - B.St.Pasun
(true)
My first two -- bested by AI - C.Indice
GO (AlphaGo)
My last two work till they're bled dry - D.Enfait
OT (overtime)
Add A, still best though years go by - E.Cestun
GOAT (greatest of all time)
Or add an H, hair black I dye - F.Haren
GOTH (black clothes, too)
Add two, I go with ship, town, ly - G.Grou
GHOST
Or maybe stare with prejudiced eye - H.Gedes
BIGOT
One who plays me will win or die. - I.Ole
Game of Thrones
There remain
the initials, which just go A-I and (I guess) don't have much extra content to them; and the names, which I'm sure are informative but I don't yet understand. (The initials may or may not want to be included.)
Very partial answer -- quotes of the day
Three letters in my name have I - A.Cecine
GOT
Not one's an A or E or Y - B.St.Pasun
(true)
My first two -- bested by AI - C.Indice
GO (AlphaGo)
My last two work till they're bled dry - D.Enfait
OT (overtime)
Add A, still best though years go by - E.Cestun
GOAT (greatest of all time)
Or add an H, hair black I dye - F.Haren
GOTH (black clothes, too)
Add two, I go with ship, town, ly - G.Grou
GHOST
Or maybe stare with prejudiced eye - H.Gedes
BIGOT
One who plays me will win or die. - I.Ole
Game of Thrones
There remain
the initials, which just go A-I and (I guess) don't have much extra content to them; and the names, which I'm sure are informative but I don't yet understand. (The initials may or may not want to be included.)
answered 10 hours ago
Gareth McCaughan♦
59.9k3150231
59.9k3150231
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
Partial Answer:
Observation 1:
the logos on the top left corner of each piece of newspaper can be combined ton form this, which is the coat of arms of Lower Silesia, Poland. Silesia-"ia"=Siles:
Observation 2:
The question mark on Dec 3 is it (country code for Italy), where the six pairs of alphabets are the country codes for France (fr), Switzerland (ch), Austria (at), Slovenia (si), Vatican (va), and San Marino (sm)
1
Your observations are a superset of mine, though, so I'm clearing my answer to de-clutter the thread. Nice job!
– George Menoutis
10 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
Partial Answer:
Observation 1:
the logos on the top left corner of each piece of newspaper can be combined ton form this, which is the coat of arms of Lower Silesia, Poland. Silesia-"ia"=Siles:
Observation 2:
The question mark on Dec 3 is it (country code for Italy), where the six pairs of alphabets are the country codes for France (fr), Switzerland (ch), Austria (at), Slovenia (si), Vatican (va), and San Marino (sm)
1
Your observations are a superset of mine, though, so I'm clearing my answer to de-clutter the thread. Nice job!
– George Menoutis
10 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
up vote
7
down vote
Partial Answer:
Observation 1:
the logos on the top left corner of each piece of newspaper can be combined ton form this, which is the coat of arms of Lower Silesia, Poland. Silesia-"ia"=Siles:
Observation 2:
The question mark on Dec 3 is it (country code for Italy), where the six pairs of alphabets are the country codes for France (fr), Switzerland (ch), Austria (at), Slovenia (si), Vatican (va), and San Marino (sm)
Partial Answer:
Observation 1:
the logos on the top left corner of each piece of newspaper can be combined ton form this, which is the coat of arms of Lower Silesia, Poland. Silesia-"ia"=Siles:
Observation 2:
The question mark on Dec 3 is it (country code for Italy), where the six pairs of alphabets are the country codes for France (fr), Switzerland (ch), Austria (at), Slovenia (si), Vatican (va), and San Marino (sm)
answered 10 hours ago
Omega Krypton
1,6771217
1,6771217
1
Your observations are a superset of mine, though, so I'm clearing my answer to de-clutter the thread. Nice job!
– George Menoutis
10 hours ago
add a comment |
1
Your observations are a superset of mine, though, so I'm clearing my answer to de-clutter the thread. Nice job!
– George Menoutis
10 hours ago
1
1
Your observations are a superset of mine, though, so I'm clearing my answer to de-clutter the thread. Nice job!
– George Menoutis
10 hours ago
Your observations are a superset of mine, though, so I'm clearing my answer to de-clutter the thread. Nice job!
– George Menoutis
10 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
Partial:
The picture in no. 5 is the seal of Paraguay. Paraguay minus RH2O (R[WATER/AGUA]) is PAY.
also:
the double letters in the bold names in each article spell: ONE MORE DEAD END
, which probably does not help. ;)
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
Partial:
The picture in no. 5 is the seal of Paraguay. Paraguay minus RH2O (R[WATER/AGUA]) is PAY.
also:
the double letters in the bold names in each article spell: ONE MORE DEAD END
, which probably does not help. ;)
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
up vote
7
down vote
Partial:
The picture in no. 5 is the seal of Paraguay. Paraguay minus RH2O (R[WATER/AGUA]) is PAY.
also:
the double letters in the bold names in each article spell: ONE MORE DEAD END
, which probably does not help. ;)
New contributor
Partial:
The picture in no. 5 is the seal of Paraguay. Paraguay minus RH2O (R[WATER/AGUA]) is PAY.
also:
the double letters in the bold names in each article spell: ONE MORE DEAD END
, which probably does not help. ;)
New contributor
edited 9 hours ago
New contributor
answered 10 hours ago
ablerks
692
692
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
Partial (non)-answer:
Concatenating the last names of the different authors of the Quote of the day, we get
CecinePasunIndiceEnfaitCestunHarenGrouGedéSolé, which gives: Ceci n'est pas un indice, en fait c'est un hareng rouge, désolé and in english,
This is not a clue, it is a red herring, sorry
which is indeed not even a partial answer, but it's a dead end worth mentioning in order to prevent falling into it.
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
Partial (non)-answer:
Concatenating the last names of the different authors of the Quote of the day, we get
CecinePasunIndiceEnfaitCestunHarenGrouGedéSolé, which gives: Ceci n'est pas un indice, en fait c'est un hareng rouge, désolé and in english,
This is not a clue, it is a red herring, sorry
which is indeed not even a partial answer, but it's a dead end worth mentioning in order to prevent falling into it.
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
7
down vote
up vote
7
down vote
Partial (non)-answer:
Concatenating the last names of the different authors of the Quote of the day, we get
CecinePasunIndiceEnfaitCestunHarenGrouGedéSolé, which gives: Ceci n'est pas un indice, en fait c'est un hareng rouge, désolé and in english,
This is not a clue, it is a red herring, sorry
which is indeed not even a partial answer, but it's a dead end worth mentioning in order to prevent falling into it.
New contributor
Partial (non)-answer:
Concatenating the last names of the different authors of the Quote of the day, we get
CecinePasunIndiceEnfaitCestunHarenGrouGedéSolé, which gives: Ceci n'est pas un indice, en fait c'est un hareng rouge, désolé and in english,
This is not a clue, it is a red herring, sorry
which is indeed not even a partial answer, but it's a dead end worth mentioning in order to prevent falling into it.
New contributor
edited 7 hours ago
rhsquared
6,99721641
6,99721641
New contributor
answered 8 hours ago
joH1
1713
1713
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
Another partial findings:
The fourth image
shows the country of Benin and Benin City, which is located in Benin's neighbour country Nigeria. The signs are hebrew for "ben", so the solution for this picture is in. (thanks to @ablerks)
The fifth picture
shows the SI prefixes. The missing one is G.
The seventh picture
could be a reference to the MI6 agents 001 to 007. Their boss is M. (thanks to @NudgeNudge)
The eigth picture
refers to presidents on the dollar bills and US states. The letters are the abbreviation of the state where the capital has the same name as the president on the bill. Lincoln is the capital of Nebraska (NE), and the red arrow indicates to read this backwards, which gives en. (thanks to @Gareth McCaughan)
The ninth picture
displays TRACK - RACK = T. (thanks to @Gareth McCaughan)
Putting together these with @DaurenYermenov's first two pictures' solutions, @OmegaKrypton's solutions for the third picture and @ablerks's sixth picture solution you get
Aw-a-it-in-g pay-m-en-t
1
You're right. The signs in the fourth image are rot13(Uroerj sbe Ora).
– ablerks
6 hours ago
1
I believe the seventh image could refer to rot13(Wnzrf Obaq'f obff (Ntrag mrebmrebfrira), Z), which would fit your solution.
– NudgeNudge
6 hours ago
2
I think the last is TRACK - RACK = T.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
6 hours ago
3
And it's in no way a surprise that the other one is EN (Lincoln -> Nebraska -> NE -> EN) but I don't quite see how it works. Lincoln (capital of Nebraska) is the guy on the $5 bill. But Jackson (capital of Mississipi) is on the $20, not the $10, and the guy on the $10 is not Columbus (capital of Ohio).
– Gareth McCaughan♦
6 hours ago
1
@GarethMcCaughan Augh, that one's on me. Turns out I was looking at 1914 banknotes or something... I'll fix the clue once I get to an actual computer.
– jafe
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
up vote
5
down vote
Another partial findings:
The fourth image
shows the country of Benin and Benin City, which is located in Benin's neighbour country Nigeria. The signs are hebrew for "ben", so the solution for this picture is in. (thanks to @ablerks)
The fifth picture
shows the SI prefixes. The missing one is G.
The seventh picture
could be a reference to the MI6 agents 001 to 007. Their boss is M. (thanks to @NudgeNudge)
The eigth picture
refers to presidents on the dollar bills and US states. The letters are the abbreviation of the state where the capital has the same name as the president on the bill. Lincoln is the capital of Nebraska (NE), and the red arrow indicates to read this backwards, which gives en. (thanks to @Gareth McCaughan)
The ninth picture
displays TRACK - RACK = T. (thanks to @Gareth McCaughan)
Putting together these with @DaurenYermenov's first two pictures' solutions, @OmegaKrypton's solutions for the third picture and @ablerks's sixth picture solution you get
Aw-a-it-in-g pay-m-en-t
1
You're right. The signs in the fourth image are rot13(Uroerj sbe Ora).
– ablerks
6 hours ago
1
I believe the seventh image could refer to rot13(Wnzrf Obaq'f obff (Ntrag mrebmrebfrira), Z), which would fit your solution.
– NudgeNudge
6 hours ago
2
I think the last is TRACK - RACK = T.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
6 hours ago
3
And it's in no way a surprise that the other one is EN (Lincoln -> Nebraska -> NE -> EN) but I don't quite see how it works. Lincoln (capital of Nebraska) is the guy on the $5 bill. But Jackson (capital of Mississipi) is on the $20, not the $10, and the guy on the $10 is not Columbus (capital of Ohio).
– Gareth McCaughan♦
6 hours ago
1
@GarethMcCaughan Augh, that one's on me. Turns out I was looking at 1914 banknotes or something... I'll fix the clue once I get to an actual computer.
– jafe
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
up vote
5
down vote
up vote
5
down vote
Another partial findings:
The fourth image
shows the country of Benin and Benin City, which is located in Benin's neighbour country Nigeria. The signs are hebrew for "ben", so the solution for this picture is in. (thanks to @ablerks)
The fifth picture
shows the SI prefixes. The missing one is G.
The seventh picture
could be a reference to the MI6 agents 001 to 007. Their boss is M. (thanks to @NudgeNudge)
The eigth picture
refers to presidents on the dollar bills and US states. The letters are the abbreviation of the state where the capital has the same name as the president on the bill. Lincoln is the capital of Nebraska (NE), and the red arrow indicates to read this backwards, which gives en. (thanks to @Gareth McCaughan)
The ninth picture
displays TRACK - RACK = T. (thanks to @Gareth McCaughan)
Putting together these with @DaurenYermenov's first two pictures' solutions, @OmegaKrypton's solutions for the third picture and @ablerks's sixth picture solution you get
Aw-a-it-in-g pay-m-en-t
Another partial findings:
The fourth image
shows the country of Benin and Benin City, which is located in Benin's neighbour country Nigeria. The signs are hebrew for "ben", so the solution for this picture is in. (thanks to @ablerks)
The fifth picture
shows the SI prefixes. The missing one is G.
The seventh picture
could be a reference to the MI6 agents 001 to 007. Their boss is M. (thanks to @NudgeNudge)
The eigth picture
refers to presidents on the dollar bills and US states. The letters are the abbreviation of the state where the capital has the same name as the president on the bill. Lincoln is the capital of Nebraska (NE), and the red arrow indicates to read this backwards, which gives en. (thanks to @Gareth McCaughan)
The ninth picture
displays TRACK - RACK = T. (thanks to @Gareth McCaughan)
Putting together these with @DaurenYermenov's first two pictures' solutions, @OmegaKrypton's solutions for the third picture and @ablerks's sixth picture solution you get
Aw-a-it-in-g pay-m-en-t
edited 5 hours ago
answered 7 hours ago
Christoph
3,3761426
3,3761426
1
You're right. The signs in the fourth image are rot13(Uroerj sbe Ora).
– ablerks
6 hours ago
1
I believe the seventh image could refer to rot13(Wnzrf Obaq'f obff (Ntrag mrebmrebfrira), Z), which would fit your solution.
– NudgeNudge
6 hours ago
2
I think the last is TRACK - RACK = T.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
6 hours ago
3
And it's in no way a surprise that the other one is EN (Lincoln -> Nebraska -> NE -> EN) but I don't quite see how it works. Lincoln (capital of Nebraska) is the guy on the $5 bill. But Jackson (capital of Mississipi) is on the $20, not the $10, and the guy on the $10 is not Columbus (capital of Ohio).
– Gareth McCaughan♦
6 hours ago
1
@GarethMcCaughan Augh, that one's on me. Turns out I was looking at 1914 banknotes or something... I'll fix the clue once I get to an actual computer.
– jafe
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
1
You're right. The signs in the fourth image are rot13(Uroerj sbe Ora).
– ablerks
6 hours ago
1
I believe the seventh image could refer to rot13(Wnzrf Obaq'f obff (Ntrag mrebmrebfrira), Z), which would fit your solution.
– NudgeNudge
6 hours ago
2
I think the last is TRACK - RACK = T.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
6 hours ago
3
And it's in no way a surprise that the other one is EN (Lincoln -> Nebraska -> NE -> EN) but I don't quite see how it works. Lincoln (capital of Nebraska) is the guy on the $5 bill. But Jackson (capital of Mississipi) is on the $20, not the $10, and the guy on the $10 is not Columbus (capital of Ohio).
– Gareth McCaughan♦
6 hours ago
1
@GarethMcCaughan Augh, that one's on me. Turns out I was looking at 1914 banknotes or something... I'll fix the clue once I get to an actual computer.
– jafe
6 hours ago
1
1
You're right. The signs in the fourth image are rot13(Uroerj sbe Ora).
– ablerks
6 hours ago
You're right. The signs in the fourth image are rot13(Uroerj sbe Ora).
– ablerks
6 hours ago
1
1
I believe the seventh image could refer to rot13(Wnzrf Obaq'f obff (Ntrag mrebmrebfrira), Z), which would fit your solution.
– NudgeNudge
6 hours ago
I believe the seventh image could refer to rot13(Wnzrf Obaq'f obff (Ntrag mrebmrebfrira), Z), which would fit your solution.
– NudgeNudge
6 hours ago
2
2
I think the last is TRACK - RACK = T.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
6 hours ago
I think the last is TRACK - RACK = T.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
6 hours ago
3
3
And it's in no way a surprise that the other one is EN (Lincoln -> Nebraska -> NE -> EN) but I don't quite see how it works. Lincoln (capital of Nebraska) is the guy on the $5 bill. But Jackson (capital of Mississipi) is on the $20, not the $10, and the guy on the $10 is not Columbus (capital of Ohio).
– Gareth McCaughan♦
6 hours ago
And it's in no way a surprise that the other one is EN (Lincoln -> Nebraska -> NE -> EN) but I don't quite see how it works. Lincoln (capital of Nebraska) is the guy on the $5 bill. But Jackson (capital of Mississipi) is on the $20, not the $10, and the guy on the $10 is not Columbus (capital of Ohio).
– Gareth McCaughan♦
6 hours ago
1
1
@GarethMcCaughan Augh, that one's on me. Turns out I was looking at 1914 banknotes or something... I'll fix the clue once I get to an actual computer.
– jafe
6 hours ago
@GarethMcCaughan Augh, that one's on me. Turns out I was looking at 1914 banknotes or something... I'll fix the clue once I get to an actual computer.
– jafe
6 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
up vote
4
down vote
Partial:
First picture is the Japanese WA (わ) backwards (and with 2 shadows):
Second is the A chord on the guitar.
So we get either AW - A or AWAWAW - A
New contributor
Good find! Add @OmegaKryptons second observation and you get rot13(njnvg).
– Christoph
8 hours ago
@DaurenYermenov Hello and welcome to PSE. Please hide your answers in spoilers using the >! prefix in the beginning of the lines.
– rhsquared
8 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
Partial:
First picture is the Japanese WA (わ) backwards (and with 2 shadows):
Second is the A chord on the guitar.
So we get either AW - A or AWAWAW - A
New contributor
Good find! Add @OmegaKryptons second observation and you get rot13(njnvg).
– Christoph
8 hours ago
@DaurenYermenov Hello and welcome to PSE. Please hide your answers in spoilers using the >! prefix in the beginning of the lines.
– rhsquared
8 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
Partial:
First picture is the Japanese WA (わ) backwards (and with 2 shadows):
Second is the A chord on the guitar.
So we get either AW - A or AWAWAW - A
New contributor
Partial:
First picture is the Japanese WA (わ) backwards (and with 2 shadows):
Second is the A chord on the guitar.
So we get either AW - A or AWAWAW - A
New contributor
edited 8 hours ago
rhsquared
6,99721641
6,99721641
New contributor
answered 8 hours ago
Dauren Yermenov
412
412
New contributor
New contributor
Good find! Add @OmegaKryptons second observation and you get rot13(njnvg).
– Christoph
8 hours ago
@DaurenYermenov Hello and welcome to PSE. Please hide your answers in spoilers using the >! prefix in the beginning of the lines.
– rhsquared
8 hours ago
add a comment |
Good find! Add @OmegaKryptons second observation and you get rot13(njnvg).
– Christoph
8 hours ago
@DaurenYermenov Hello and welcome to PSE. Please hide your answers in spoilers using the >! prefix in the beginning of the lines.
– rhsquared
8 hours ago
Good find! Add @OmegaKryptons second observation and you get rot13(njnvg).
– Christoph
8 hours ago
Good find! Add @OmegaKryptons second observation and you get rot13(njnvg).
– Christoph
8 hours ago
@DaurenYermenov Hello and welcome to PSE. Please hide your answers in spoilers using the >! prefix in the beginning of the lines.
– rhsquared
8 hours ago
@DaurenYermenov Hello and welcome to PSE. Please hide your answers in spoilers using the >! prefix in the beginning of the lines.
– rhsquared
8 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
Partial: (with some help from @GarethMcCaughan
It looks like all the latin names are misspelled. So far I discovered some of the differences which might contain hidden text. Starting with the top image here is what I found so far:
1. r
2. e a
3. d y
4. f o
5. r d
6. e l
7. i
8. v e
9. r y
which reads "Ready for delivery"
Also the first 3 pictures give us:
AW + A + IT = AWAIT
1
Unsurprisingly #6 is missing EL.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
10 hours ago
1
And #3 is missing DY. So that message is pretty clear.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
10 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
Partial: (with some help from @GarethMcCaughan
It looks like all the latin names are misspelled. So far I discovered some of the differences which might contain hidden text. Starting with the top image here is what I found so far:
1. r
2. e a
3. d y
4. f o
5. r d
6. e l
7. i
8. v e
9. r y
which reads "Ready for delivery"
Also the first 3 pictures give us:
AW + A + IT = AWAIT
1
Unsurprisingly #6 is missing EL.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
10 hours ago
1
And #3 is missing DY. So that message is pretty clear.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
10 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
Partial: (with some help from @GarethMcCaughan
It looks like all the latin names are misspelled. So far I discovered some of the differences which might contain hidden text. Starting with the top image here is what I found so far:
1. r
2. e a
3. d y
4. f o
5. r d
6. e l
7. i
8. v e
9. r y
which reads "Ready for delivery"
Also the first 3 pictures give us:
AW + A + IT = AWAIT
Partial: (with some help from @GarethMcCaughan
It looks like all the latin names are misspelled. So far I discovered some of the differences which might contain hidden text. Starting with the top image here is what I found so far:
1. r
2. e a
3. d y
4. f o
5. r d
6. e l
7. i
8. v e
9. r y
which reads "Ready for delivery"
Also the first 3 pictures give us:
AW + A + IT = AWAIT
edited 7 hours ago
answered 11 hours ago
rhsquared
6,99721641
6,99721641
1
Unsurprisingly #6 is missing EL.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
10 hours ago
1
And #3 is missing DY. So that message is pretty clear.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
10 hours ago
add a comment |
1
Unsurprisingly #6 is missing EL.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
10 hours ago
1
And #3 is missing DY. So that message is pretty clear.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
10 hours ago
1
1
Unsurprisingly #6 is missing EL.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
10 hours ago
Unsurprisingly #6 is missing EL.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
10 hours ago
1
1
And #3 is missing DY. So that message is pretty clear.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
10 hours ago
And #3 is missing DY. So that message is pretty clear.
– Gareth McCaughan♦
10 hours ago
add a comment |
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