Okay, thanks. I must have been doing something wrong the first time, since I could have sworn I did that. Pretty cryptic response, eh?
Zsofia, you’re stuck where I was stuck… so I started poking around in other places on the net for answers. Apparently, this was meant for a specific audience. You need a Username/Password login for DarkTower.net to get further.
Go “back to the beginning” and try:
Username: BANGO
Password: SKANK
Heh.
Anyone figured out anything past where Avalonian is? I’ve been staring at the map thing with a dumb expression on my face and am totally stumped.
The number in the middle is the key.
Man, I feel stupid. I thought I knew how to get past the development page, but I spelled out 1999 instead of using the numeral
Since then, I’ve been relying on you guys to get me through. Now I’m stumped on that grid as well. Am I at least right in thinking you do indeed need to type in a phrase that will make a coherent sentence, composed of some words from the grid? Not that I have any idea how to get that, but I’d like to know if I’m completely barking up the wrong tree.
you don’t need to type anything in the box below the string of numbers with the plus sign on them. Click on the top of the tall building in the center, and “prime the pump backwards all save nine”
Yup, I’ve gotten past that. Now I’m on the grid with words on it, and the number 9 in the center background. When you put in the wrong answer, it gives you “I went back to Manderly,” which is the first line in Rebecca, but I have no idea if that is significant to the solution or not. There don’t appear to be any nine-letter words, and putting the words that touch the 9 together makes nonsense. I also tried rotating the grid so the 9 is upright, but that didn’t seem to clarify anything.
I could definitely use a clue.
The box at the bottom of the graph paper puzzle is for the answer to the question that you form by solving the puzzle. Here’s a hand:
Try taking the words on the 9th squares in all the grid boxes, across and down.
Then rearrange them to make a sentance (or, rather, a question).
Regarding the graph puzzle:It has something to do with Bag of Bones, doesn’t it? I’ll have to reread that one.