Wednesday, June 13, 2012

The First Easter Egg

I received my copy of 'Ready Player One' by Ernest Cline and started sorting through it to find the Easter Egg (a hidden website). I had this idea that the clue might end in .com but I also considered that it could end in .net or .org making it possibly very hard.

You know how they say that sometimes the mind works best if it's allow to wander while doing something else? Well, that's the tactic I employed. I was streaming some video over the net and flipping through the book to try and find the clue.

(1) I went supremely obvious with the first one. I tried the name of the game world - theoasis.com which took me to a weird website. Okay, it wouldn't be that easy.

(2) I considered how the hero of the story solved the puzzles. The one that seemed to fit the most was the "Adventure" video game clue (for the 2nd key?). I checked out that scene because I recalled it included a hidden room. I remembered incorrectly and that led nowhere.

(3) I went back to the beginning of the story. I was reading through the "video" that starts the contest. In the video, it mentioned Warren Robinett, the first designer to add an Easter Egg to a game. I went on to wikipedia to check him out. His name was spelled correctly, but I tried warrenrobi.net anyway. Nothing.

(4) In the same section, the name of the company running the game world stood out - Gregarious Gaming Systems. I tried that website. It lead me a real one with the logo for the company. I tried clicking all over it, but nothing happened. Still, I knew I was on the right track.

(5) I figured if Gregarious Gaming Systems was on the web, I could search for it on google. I did just that and it brought up two websites that seemed relevant. I was already on the one, but the other one led me straight to the first gate. In retrospect it seems too obvious, and yet it took me a while to find it. That either says something about me or them.

(6) The game was called "The Stacks" and it was a classic Atari platformer. I didn't read the entire instructions, so it took me a while to beat it. Only after reading how to avoid dying by the "flashers" was I able to collect all the parts to the console. I beat it and found the QC image.

(7) I don't have a smartphone, so I couldn't scan it normally. It took me three downloads to find a program that would scan it from my computer. Then, I had to crop, brighten, and increase the contrast so the program would read it and reveal the second gate.

The current leader board is below. At least 225 people beat me to it. I'm going to have to be faster if I want to win that car.


Leaderboard

playing games for cars
what a sweet fun life I have
when I believe it

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

The Hunting Game

One of my favorite books from last year was "Ready Player One" by Ernest Cline. The basic idea is an Easter Egg hunt across a giant video game / virtual reality world. All the clues and answers are based on 1980s pop culture (movies, music, video games, books).

I wasn't even alive in the '80s (although neither is the protagonist of the book), but the story sucked me in like quicksand. I missed most of the references, including ones to class works that I will not mention because I am still ashamed I haven't actually read/saw/played them.

So, I read the book, liked it, and forgot about it. Until today. Ernest Cline set up his own Easter Egg hunt like the one in the book (on a smaller scale of course). I'm going to try and do it. Inside the book is a clue to a web site. Once on the site, you have to play 3 different video games (probably from the 1980s) to win a 1981 DeLorean. Thankfully I know that's the car from Back to the Future. I'm not sure how I'm going to find it, but like in the book, it sound like fun.

www.ernestcline.com

today's game challenge:
find the hidden Easter Egg
win an awesome car