@Emrakul As a Lojban enthusiast, I suspect you'll be interested to know that SFF has just received an answer from the founder of the Language Creation Society, in their official capacity as LCS spokesperson, providing us with all the filings (yes, all of them) in the Paramount vs Axanar legal case about the Klingon language.
That answer is going to get bountied up to the nines.
For instance, in this puzzle, was it OK to have a comma between "rosemary" and "first" even though "rosemary, first" was meant to be interpreted as R? Or is that considered dodgy?
@ChrisCudmore I ... I kind of feel like you just told everyone in this chat room to piss off. :)
@Randal'Thor (VTD)
user61230
@Randal'Thor Fascinating. I'm quite adamantly opposed to legal award on the basis of language as intellectual property, for reasons that should be obvious.
@ChrisCudmore Well - ok - except maybe Beastly Gerbil. cuz, like, he's not human, he's a gerbil.
user61230
The issue may overlap trademark law, though. It would be unfortunate, but reasonable, for the court to award damages to Paramount based on the use of "Klingon."
@Volatility Your python program is failing to give a solution for a 9x9 number slope, after over 9 million tries
@Emrakul The name, maybe, but not the language, I don't believe
user61230
Yeah, that's what I mean. There's (very) tenuous legal precedent in place for treating languages as the collective "property" of the speakers, even if constructed.
user61230
But Klingon was a trademark before it was a language.
For all those interested, I've updated my Number Slope grid generator to prettify the output (and make it completely pseudo-random): github.com/AbsVolatility/number-slope
An Add-A-Gram takes a word, adds a letter, and then shuffles the letters to make a new word (I guess you can call this an Add-A-Gram's Add-A-Grammar). In this game, I will define an Add-A-Gram chain, and a solution should contain the complete list of words in the chain.
For example, if I provide...
Here is a puzzle for you.
I hope you got a good brain for this one ain't easy.
One wrong move and you are done for.
These dogs and other 4 legged creatures aren't gonna lick your wounds.
In the land of the rodents, the nightmare has just begun.
But the police is not gonna help you.
...
This is based on the Add-A-Gram puzzles by wildBillMunson. You need to find a chain of words, such that each next word is an anagram of the previous word plus an additional letter.
Example: a doctor inside a rejection inside an elector; the solution is "vet", "veto", "voter".
Here is the chain...
This is based on the Add-A-Gram puzzles by wildBillMunson. You need to find a chain of words, such that each next word is an anagram of the previous word plus an additional letter.
a Tasty bone in British gratitude in a Roasted fashion in great in secret in a Stone in peculiar in a rank in far ...
IMPORTANT! READ ME:
The only 'puzzle' parts of this are the links, titled 'Set X', 'Inscription X', or 'Constellation X'. Everything else is flavortext, apart from this readme section, although the flavortext does tell you that the meaning of the inscriptions is not supposed to be deduced until...
I may be dense, but I am with @Sid here - it's unclear how to know what the objective is, and there's no way to know before moving on if you have an understanding or not.
I see patterns, I guess? I don't know if they're relevant because we're not asked (yet) to complete a pattern and see if we're right.
Here's the relevant part of the edit: 'These are plain grid-deduction puzzles, apart from the fact you must work out the mechanics yourself. Once you know the meanings, they are simply pen-paper puzzles in the vein of Japanese puzzles such as Sudoku, Hashi, Nurikabe, Slitherlink, etc'
@Rubio awwww! I did design this puzzle to be a solving experience. As soon as an answer goes up, the temptation to throw that experience away will only grow :P
Things only really start picking up at set 5, anyhow.