Chapter 3890 Angle Code Analysis
Chapter 3890 Angle Code Analysis
Chapter 3890 Angle Code Analysis
Turing seemed to be in deep thought, leaning against the table behind the sofa without moving, with only some characters flying across the small screen from time to time.
These characters seemed to be arranged in a meaningless order, some were common characters, some were angle codes... Ingres even saw English letters?!
Angel stared at the English letters flashing on the screen and fell into confusion.
He can understand both common characters and corner codes.
What the hell are the English alphabet?
Why do English letters appear on Turing? Is the fashion monster connected to the distant universe?
Ingres' mind was full of thoughts, and he could even come up with several stories in his head.
"Aren't you going to ask about Turing's angle code? Why don't you say anything?" At this time, Laplace, who had been paying attention to Turing, suddenly spoke up and asked in confusion: "Did something happen over there?"
Ingres looked at Laplace and suddenly thought of a possibility: Could it be that Laplace told Turing about the letters?
Laplace knew the English alphabet...and it was Ingres who told her about it.
Angel hurriedly asked Laplace.
Laplace didn't hide anything and nodded: "It's me. Didn't I ask you before how to set the difficulty of the dungeon? You were the one who suggested that I use letters."
Angel naturally remembered this incident, but...
"Didn't you refuse at that time?"
Laplace: "It did seem a bit strange at the time, but I couldn't think of a suitable level setting, so I just used your letter grade for now."
Angel: "First?"
If there is a "first", there will naturally be an "after".
So, this is not the final level setting, but temporary?
Laplace nodded. "The integration of dungeons is just the beginning. It's hard to say whether there will be any level changes in the future. Anyway, let's just use it for now."
Angel understood that Laplace just couldn't find a suitable difficulty level setting for the dungeon for the time being, so he adopted the letter grading suggestion that Angel had previously proposed.
As to whether letter grades will be used in the future, it remains unknown.
Hearing this, Angle finally understood why English letters appeared on Turing's screen. It was not because of the outrageous stories he made up in his mind. It was simply because Laplace used letter grading, and Turing was her assistant...
But then again.
"Compared to letter grading, I actually think bronze, silver, gold... have a better sense of progression." Ingres once again gave his advice.
"For humans, perhaps these metals have a certain degree of value, but for other groups, gold is not necessarily more valuable than bronze." Laplace: "For example, in the Helasu of the Golden Country, gold is as valuable as sand."
The Golden Country is also a country in the White Mirror Region, where lives a people called the Hailasu.
Angel: "Then add an adjective before the metal, such as stubborn listening, unyielding silver, glorious gold..."
Laplace was silent for a moment. "Compared like this, it seems that letters are more suitable."
Let the letters be the letters, it’s just a difficulty level design anyway.
Angel: "..."
Angel wanted to make more suggestions, but when he saw Laplace had turned his head, he swallowed the words in his throat.
Let’s solve the suitcase password first.
……
Angel woke up Turing and asked it about the results of the previous analysis.
Turing: "Although there are not many corner codes on the suitcase, the combinations that can be parsed are very large. If we want to display them all, it may take a long time."
To put it simply, angle codes are just basic components. Different combinations of angle codes will produce completely different results.
Even if the angle code is the same, the results will be different due to the difference in arrangement order.
So, even though Ingres didn't give many angle codes, the combinations that Turing could arrange are like a small mountain of number series. If we were to describe them one by one, it would probably take more than a day to finish.
Angel frowned slightly: "Then do you know how to unlock the code on the suitcase?"
Turing shook the small TV up and down: "I can probably guess it."
Turing expressed his guess.
The code on the suitcase consists of six digits, each of which corresponds to an angle code, and this angle code can encompass the meaning that Turing had previously deciphered.
Turing knew that it was difficult to understand just by saying this, so he gave an example.
It presented a passage on its own small screen.
"Dispel the darkness and illuminate everything"
"This is a combination I analyzed from the corner code on the suitcase, and the final interpretation is this." Turing paused: "Master, what do you think this sentence means?"
Angel: "The sun?"
Turing nodded happily: "Yes, this is the sun."
Then, Turing displayed a corner code symbol on the screen: "This symbol means the sun. In other words, if the previous paragraph is the correct interpretation, then the first corner code of the suitcase is this symbol."
"The problem now is that I have come up with various interpretations, but I don't know which one corresponds to the correct password."
To put it bluntly, there are not enough clues.
Ingres also understood what Turing meant. He needed to look for clues in the hidden waters so that Turing could find the corresponding meaning.
However, the problem came again.
The clues here are most likely presented in the form of angle codes.
Even if Angel discovered it, he probably wouldn't recognize it as a clue.
Angel pondered for a moment and said, "How about this? I will use illusion to show you the structure diagram, bird's-eye view, and perspective diagram of the hidden waters. You can see where there may be clues."
A structural diagram? A bird's-eye view? A transparent diagram? A dull expression appeared on Turing's small screen: This can be done?
Angel ignored Turing's expression, turned on the God's perspective, and manipulated the nightmare atmosphere in the text manor to create an illusion.
The next second, Turing saw a huge illusion of water appear before his eyes.
This water illusion is presented from the perspective of the sandbox, as if Turing is outside the sandbox, observing the movements inside the sandbox...
"The master is so powerful." Turing said in a daze.
Angel: "If you have time to flatter, look around to see where there might be clues."
Turing said "hmm" and began to observe the water scene in the box.
There are various abandoned items, ruins of buildings, and a glowing underwater church in the water.
Although it was a sandbox perspective, because it was a bird's-eye view, many details were unclear. Turing also had no idea where the clues might be.
At this moment, Angel's voice reached its ears again: "Where you want to see, you can use the magic hand to directly click on the corresponding position, and then it will be enlarged."
Previously, Ingres had equipped Turing with a magic hand to make it easier for him to use the paper in the text space to write the corner code. As long as Turing wanted, he could use the magic hand to perform actions at will.
According to Ingres's description, Turing stretched out his magic hand and gently clicked on the location of the underwater church. The bird's-eye view immediately showed that the tunnel was shrinking. The next second, the perspective seemed to be zoomed in, directly to the location near the underwater church.
Even if Turing stretched out his magic hand and turned it slightly, the perspective would also turn accordingly, and he could zoom in and out 360 degrees to view every detail of the underwater church.
It was also the first time that Turing had seen such smooth operation, and he had a lot of fun playing with it. He turned to the east to look at the traces on the building, and then he zoomed out dozens of meters to look at the structure of the church from different angles.
At the end of the game, Angel had to step in to stop it.
Because...he was about to vomit.
Every time Turing changes his perspective, it is actually done synchronously by Angle. In a sense, this is a kind of interactive live broadcast.
Angle is broadcasting live and Turing is interacting.
The perspective kept changing. Not to mention whether Angel's energy would last, the dizziness alone was too much for him to bear.
After Turing learned about the situation, he felt a little embarrassed. He stopped playing and began to look for clues seriously.
On the other side, while Turing was looking for clues, Laplace was also curiously looking at the illusion of the hidden waters.
"Deep water with oxygen, abandoned building ruins, and a classical underwater church..." The more Laplace looked, the more he felt that this area of water was full of weirdness.
It doesn't look like the style of Modern City at all, but it appears within the scope of Modern City.
“Could the dark corner be the other side of Modern City?” Laplace murmured.
Although the forms of the inner and outer worlds are rare, Laplace has seen many of them during his long years of observing the Sea of Mirrors. Generally speaking, the inner and outer worlds actually have a "reflection" relationship, but judging from the current dark corner information, it doesn't look like the inner world at all.
Angel: "Whether it is the other world or not, we will know after the dark corner is opened."
Because Turing stopped playing around and stopped looking around, Ingres felt a lot more relaxed and even had the time to talk to Laplace.
“That’s right.” Laplace nodded. “But I feel that it’s a bit strange that the Dark Corner dungeon is hidden in the Modern City. Perhaps there is a huge pit in it.”
The main reason why Laplace had this feeling was that... the Dark Corner dungeon was too secretive.
Don’t think that Angle did it in one night, that was simply because he cheated.
A normal challenger who enters the Modern City dungeon may not be able to access information about the Dark Corner even if he completes the main storyline.
Even if you are lucky enough to get access to the dark corner information, it is extremely difficult to find the entrance to the dark corner.
The dark corner copy that is hidden to the extreme seems to be revealing a message from the inside out: it does not want ordinary people to discover it.
Because if the Wonderland Power really wants ordinary people to discover the dark corner copy, they can just put the dark corner copy in the necessary process of the main task, or even directly say in the task overview when you enter the Modern City copy that there is a dark corner in the copy.
So, why is the power of the fairyland hidden in such dark corners so that ordinary people cannot discover it?
The only reason Laplace could think of was... there were big pits, giant pits, and sinkholes in there.
Perhaps it is extremely dangerous, or perhaps it is extremely deadly.
Either way, it shows that dark corners are threatening.
Facing Laplace's concerns, Angel also understood: "That's why I went in to take a look myself. Don't worry, others may get into trouble, but I'm sure nothing will happen to me."
Laplace thought about it and agreed that this was the case.
No matter how difficult the copy is, cheaters can be exempted from it.
While Ingres and Laplace were talking, Turing seemed to have discovered something.
"The murals here seem to correspond to the information in the corner code." Turing's surprised voice came.
Angel looked over and found that Turing had pulled his perspective into the underwater church. There were a lot of murals carved on the walls of the hall on the first floor of the church, and Turing was now standing in front of a mural.
This is a picture of "the God of Light waving his staff and shining light on the earth."
"This picture actually corresponds to what I just said, 'dispelling the darkness and illuminating all things', which is the sun." Turing used the sun as an example just now, and it was not a random example. He indeed analyzed the sun from the angle code.
Angel's eyes lit up: "You mean, the mural corresponds to the password of the suitcase. The sun is one of the passwords?"
Turing nodded, then shook his head.
"The mural may indeed correspond to the code of the suitcase, but it is still unclear whether the sun is one of the codes. Because..." Turing controlled the magic hand and zoomed out the view of the church hall.
There are murals on most of the walls in the entire hall. If you count carefully, there are a total of thirty-three murals.
The combination of the suitcase is only six digits.
"I can find the corresponding scenes depicted in each mural in the angle codes I analyzed before." Turing: "So, if there are no other accidents, the code is likely to be in these murals. But the problem now is that only six of the thirty-three murals are correct. How do we determine which mural is correct? And how should the order of the murals be arranged?"
Turing has not yet found the answers to these two questions.
"Could the answer be in the mural?" Laplace's voice came, and he also stepped forward to join in the fun.
However, after Laplace roughly scanned the thirty-three murals, he did not find anything fishy.
"The murals surround this half-human, half-puppet stage. Could it be that this half-human, half-puppet contains the secret of the murals?" Angel guessed.
Turing zoomed in and carefully observed the details and movements of the half-human, half-dummy.
But still no connection was found between the half-human, half-doll and the mural.
Time passed minute by minute, and Turing almost memorized the contents of every mural, but still found no clues.
Angel noticed that Turing's eyes on the small TV were also bloodshot, and it looked as if it was turned on at full power.
Angel hesitated for a moment and suggested, "Why don't we stop focusing on these murals and look somewhere else? The murals may indeed be related to the code, but the clue to choose six out of thirty-three may be somewhere else."
Turing also knew that he might be a little crazy and was obsessed with the murals.
It swayed silently up and down, controlling its magic hand to look elsewhere.
Just as the perspective was changing and stretching, Turing suddenly discovered a bright spot that he had not noticed before...
(End of this chapter)
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