Editing Talk:Where's an Egg?

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{{featuredarticle}}
 
==Character themes==
==Character themes==
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: Though sometimes it'll fail to play both themes together... --{{User:Jay/sig}} 16:57, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
: Though sometimes it'll fail to play both themes together... --{{User:Jay/sig}} 16:57, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
: Oh, yeah, and when you win, it'll play what sounds like all the themes together. --{{User:Jay/sig}} 17:03, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
: Oh, yeah, and when you win, it'll play what sounds like all the themes together. --{{User:Jay/sig}} 17:03, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
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:: Could someone decompile the seperate themes? [[User:Cyberdemon|Cyberdemon]] 23:27, 10 November 2009 (UTC)
 
==Multiple endings==
==Multiple endings==
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Those aren't just any "spaceships", those are definitely meant to refer to the Sputnik satellites.
Those aren't just any "spaceships", those are definitely meant to refer to the Sputnik satellites.
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The first is Sputnik.  The second is probably [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vostok_1 Vostok 1], with Yuri Gagarin, the first human in space.  The third is [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voskhod_2 Voskhod 2], with Aleksei Leonov, the first human to perform a spacewalk.  [[User:CaseyG|CaseyG]] 01:55, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:Dead on - good work! They definitely appear to be celebrating Russia's "firsts" in space.  First man-made satellite, first human in space, and first spacewalk.  -{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 02:17, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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Just to let you know, I let the time run down to 96 before getting bored, and nothing unusual happened when I shot the culprit. So it doesn't seem there are any other endings. Why the heck they think people need as much time as they give is totally and utterly beyond me - the amount of time is ridiculously high and takes forever to run down! - but whatever. --{{User:Jay/sig}} 05:30, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:Yeah, I let it run down to 001 and shot the culprit — just the normal ending. Also, I agree: 1000 seconds is unnecessary. I will say, though, that the first time I played it I was completely clueless, so it was nice that I could take my time stumbling around and trying to figure out what was going on. {{User:Trey56/sig}} 08:46, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::This is Forum fodder primarily, but I'll briefly add that being timed out when learning a game is really frustrating and turns me off, and that may be a reason behind TBC's use of such a long timeout. {{User:Qermaq/sig}} 09:17, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
== Locations, suspects, and items ==
== Locations, suspects, and items ==
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*Slingshot  
*Slingshot  
*Cat
*Cat
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I think once the locations, items, suspects are re-ordered, we can pull the stub tag off the article. Lots of great info and we have the basics now. {{User:Wbwolf/sig}} 22:19, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:The proposed Kid Speedy is still listed as "Red-haired boy" on the page.  Also, he could be [[Ron Cumberdale]] instead.  [[User:72.133.214.202|72.133.214.202]] 04:51, 27 July 2007 (UTC)
 
== Item Talk ==
== Item Talk ==
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This is true, because all characters either always lie or always tell the truth [[User:68.54.84.110|68.54.84.110]] 19:40, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
This is true, because all characters either always lie or always tell the truth [[User:68.54.84.110|68.54.84.110]] 19:40, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
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'''HE'S BOTH!''' 13:52, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
 
== Painfully dumb question... ==
== Painfully dumb question... ==
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==Too many colors==
==Too many colors==
When you hover over a button, it gradients from gray to yellow (and back again when you remove) Thats waaaaay too many shades of yellow for a game like this. Maybe put this in remarks or goofs. I have bad edit etiquette :P
When you hover over a button, it gradients from gray to yellow (and back again when you remove) Thats waaaaay too many shades of yellow for a game like this. Maybe put this in remarks or goofs. I have bad edit etiquette :P
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:Hardly. I think the gradient is a nice touch, and it was definitely intentional, as part of the game. Definitely not a goof. [[User:The 3000th flare|The_3000th_Flare]]
 
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::This is a ridiculous claim, and I will have no part in this discussion... oh crap, I already did. So, best thing to do is... to go back and not listen to that message, and then we've got nothing to worry about. Oh, wait... in fact...
 
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::...tcaf ni ...tiaw ,hO .tuoba yrrow ot gnihton tog ev'ew neht dna ,egassem taht ot netsil ton dna kcab og ot ...si od ot gniht tseb ,oS .did ydaerla I ,parc ho ...noissucsid siht ni trap on evah lliw I dna ,mialc suolucidir a si sihT
 
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::Okay, there. I think I reversed it. What? What do you ''mean'' that doesn't work? Oh, crap. {{User:DeFender1031/sig}} 18:37, 2 August 2007 (UTC)
 
==Screen shot==
==Screen shot==
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[[Image:Where's an Egg - Suspects - Maid.png|thumb|Totally a butcher.]]
[[Image:Where's an Egg - Suspects - Maid.png|thumb|Totally a butcher.]]
Which person is supposed to be the maid? Process of elimination of all the other characters left a person who appears to be a butcher.--[[User:Another Freakin' Guy Named Daniel|Another Freakin' Guy Named Daniel]] 21:26, 16 July 2007 (UTC) Also, which one is supposed to be the movie theater? Process of elimination left what resembles the Lincoln Memorial.
Which person is supposed to be the maid? Process of elimination of all the other characters left a person who appears to be a butcher.--[[User:Another Freakin' Guy Named Daniel|Another Freakin' Guy Named Daniel]] 21:26, 16 July 2007 (UTC) Also, which one is supposed to be the movie theater? Process of elimination left what resembles the Lincoln Memorial.
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I think the one with the red rope and yellowish wall is the movie theater.- [[User:70.243.66.159|70.243.66.159]] 16:09, 17 July 2007 (UTC) (Everybody!  Sorry, forgot to sign in...)
 
== Ending Screen ==
== Ending Screen ==
That's not a police station, it's Lenin's Mausoleum (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lenin%27s_Mausoleum)
That's not a police station, it's Lenin's Mausoleum (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lenin%27s_Mausoleum)
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:Apparently we don't know too much 'bout Russia. Thanks for pointing that out! {{User:Has Matt?/sig}} 21:47, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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Also the word vinovnik (виновник) would be better translated as "guilty person". Criminal is prestupnik (преступник) in Russian.
 
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We would probably use "culprit" in English.--[[User:Tenka Muteki|Tenka Muteki]] 23:35, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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That "uniformed man" looks like Stalin [http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/4/4d/Stalin_02.jpg]. Well, as much as 'good graphics' can allow, anyways ;).  It's got his mustache. Given that the game seems to be set in Soviet Russia, there is more than a good chance that it's suppose to be Stalin.  What does everyone else thing? {{unsigned|67.71.64.144|23:28, 17 July 2007 (UTC)}}
 
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:I'm all for it. It looks enough like him to me, and it certainly fits with the Russian theme. {{User:Trey56/sig}} 23:57, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::It seems very likely. {{User:Bluebry/sig}} 00:00, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:Does anyone not think it's Stalin?
 
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::I think it ''could'' be, but are we sure enough for this not to be considered undue speculation? — [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 01:07, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::To me, it has the following point for it being Stalin:
 
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:::the setting is Soivet Russia
 
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:::the medal is given out at Lenin's Mausoleum, and Stalin stood atop of Lenin's Mausoleum during the post-WWII victory parade (it's the kind of place a Soviet dictator would give out a medal)
 
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:::The mustache and uniform look like Stalin's, and not like any other Soviet dictator (No other Soviet dictator had a mustach like that, although Lenin did have a goatee, he wasn't known for wearing a uniform and would, persumably, be in his tomb)
 
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:::Stalin might actually want someone shot for stealing an egg (and I'm only half joking on that last one)
 
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::I don't see any points against it being Stalin.  I cannot discount it being some other uniformed mustachio'd Soviet authority figure, like some head of the KGB or something, but no others come to mind
 
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::Does anyone know someone else that might fit that discritpion? {{unsigned|67.71.64.144|02:12, 18 July 2007}}
 
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:::I '''strongly oppose''' the idea that it's Stalin. It's just a guy in a uniform. There were many of those if Soviet Russia, Lenin's tomb was used by every Soviet leader for parades, and Stalin was dead years before those spacecrafts were launched. I also see absoluetly no persuavive reason why it ''should'' be Stalin.{{User:Loafing/sig}} 04:56, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::::I see your point, but I don't think the timeline matters too much — John McEnroe wasn't even born when Sputnik was launched, for example.  Rather, I think these other famous historical Russian appearances strengthen the case for it being Stalin. {{User:Trey56/sig}} 05:14, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::::Stalin is in this game, but not the uniformed man. It's the man pictured immediately above this thread.
 
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:::::: Were it not for the timeline, I would say it was certainly Stalin. Both the mustache and uniform are too close to be coincidence. Even with the timeline problems, I think Stalin is still the best fit. He is certainly the most obvious mustached man in a Russian uniform. In fact I can't think of any other who would be appropriate. —{{User:Geshmalderborgen/sig}} 21:15, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::What is being ignored, perhaps, is the quote of Stalin's (though far from originally his) that "You can't make an omelet without breaking eggs."  It is often falsely attributed to him.  [http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&safe=off&rls=com.microsoft%3Aen-us%3AIE-SearchBox&rlz=1I7RNWN&q=Make+omelet+breaking+eggs+stalin Do I really need to give you a google link to it?]
 
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== Suspect and location images ==
 
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While the suspect and location images were originally icons, they have now been overwritten with full-sized images. Personally, I prefer the icons for three reasons:
 
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#The full body characters are much taller than the rest of the images, which makes the table look a little lopsided.
 
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#<s>The icon images are pixel-for-pixel, whereas there are some cropping issues with the full-sized images (compare the {{p|l=http://www.hrwiki.org/images/archive/5/5b/20070716220648%21Where%27s_an_Egg_-_Suspects_-_Maid.png butcher icon}} with the {{p|l=http://www.hrwiki.org/images/archive/5/5b/20070716235952%21Where%27s_an_Egg_-_Suspects_-_Maid.png full-body butcher}})</s> (fixed)
 
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#We don't need to illustrate every component of the game completely, just give an icon for identification purposes.
 
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Does anyone agree, or are we happy with the staus quo? {{User:Trey56/sig}} 22:30, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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: I think the table is fine as is, especially with the ability to expand the locations to a larger size.  Perhaps making the size of the icons closer to the same size (using the item icons as a guide)? {{User:Wbwolf/sig}} 22:36, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::The icons are fine by me, alhtough the cropping issues can easily be fixed. If you think reverting back to icons is the better choice, by all means, go for it. I don't see a problem with keeping the locations as full shots, however. {{User:FireBird/sig}} 22:42, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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== Names of People, Places and iTems ==
 
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Using a decompiler, the names are '''Jessifer, Pall, Brodermaker, Mancuso, Damella, Deark, Gubby, Les and Joeff'''. The places are called '''Seward Lane, Hollway, A Room, Gym, Bank, Gumption Road, Upstairs, Nearby and Under'''. The items are called '''Bottle, Ball, Butterfly, Dog, Gym Bag, Fanny Pack, Frying Pan, Candlestick and Laptop'''. Not sure which is which. I might have another look later on when I'm home from school.{{User:Loafing/sig}} 22:42, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:That's crazy :P Especially since some of those names bear little resemblance to the items... {{User:Trey56/sig}} 22:55, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::I'm more surprised they put all the names there. By the way, nice work on the [[looking old]] reference. --{{User:TotalSpaceshipGuy3/sig}} 23:57, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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I have a Flash decompiler and I'm not finding these names anywhere in the image files. Where are YOU finding them? --{{User:Jay/sig}} 02:13, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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: Never mind; I found them, but I see no indication of which is which, unless they define them in numerical order as the images appear (and who could tell - there aren't any bottles or balls to be seen anyway!) --{{User:Jay/sig}} 02:19, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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The internal names Loafing listed don't appear to actually be used anywhere... the only time these lists of names are even mentioned is that the list of placenames is added to a non-existant (or no-longer-existant) drop-down list on the map screen (possibly a stub, before they made the pretty buttons?). They seem to only be there for debugging purposes. However, it's reasonable to assume that, as debugging tools, they're in the same order as the numerical ids that everything's stored with, which'll make them:
 
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{| border="0"
 
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|
 
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{| border="1" style="border-collapse: collapse"
 
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|- style="background: #EEE"
 
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! colspan="2" | Places
 
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|- style="background: #EEE"
 
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! Their name !! Our name
 
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|-
 
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| Seward Lane || Aquarium
 
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|-
 
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| Hollway<!--sic--> || Park
 
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|-
 
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| A Room || Icy Mountains
 
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|-
 
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| Gym || Bank
 
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|-
 
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| Bank || Beach
 
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|-
 
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| Gumption Road || Desert
 
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|-
 
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| Upstairs || City
 
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|-
 
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| Nearby || Art Museum
 
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|-
 
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| Under || Bridge
 
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|}
 
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|
 
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{| border="1" style="border-collapse: collapse"
 
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|- style="background: #EEE"
 
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! colspan="2" | Items
 
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|- style="background: #EEE"
 
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! Their name !! Our name
 
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|-
 
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| Bottle || Wrench
 
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|-
 
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| Ball || Beer
 
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|-
 
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| Butterfly || Cat
 
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|-
 
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| Dog || Slingshot
 
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|-
 
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| Gym Bag || Pencil
 
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|-
 
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| Fanny Pack || Gym Bag
 
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|-
 
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| Frying Pan || Bomb
 
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|-
 
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| Candlestick || Potted Plant
 
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|-
 
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| Laptop || Strawberry
 
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|}
 
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|
 
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{| border="1" style="border-collapse: collapse"
 
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|- style="background: #EEE"
 
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! colspan="2" | People
 
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|- style="background: #EEE"
 
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! Their name !! Our name
 
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|-
 
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| Jessifer || Blonde Woman
 
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|-
 
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| Pall || Blue hat man
 
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|-
 
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| Brodermaker || Old Woman
 
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|-
 
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| Mancuso || Butler
 
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|-
 
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| Damella || Mechanic
 
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|-
 
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| Deark || Red hat man
 
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|-
 
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| Gubby || Butcher
 
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|-
 
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| Les || Kid Speedy/Ron Cumberdale
 
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|-
 
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| Joeff || John McEnroe
 
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|}
 
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|}
 
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It seems clear that these debugging names were used ''well before'' the current art was made... it's odd that the one named "Bank" is one ''after'' the real Bank, and the "Gym Bag" is one ''before'' the real Gym Bag... but that's the order they are in the Flash file. I don't think the names warrant mentioning in the article... which is why I made the full tables here on the talk page. {{User:Phlip/sig}} 14:35, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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: We should definitely keep our names in the articles; they're much clearer [[User:The 3000th flare|The_3000th_Flare]] 18:03, 2 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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::I think we should put TBC names in the Trivia section.  [[User:TreeWithAChainsaw|TreeWithAChainsaw]] 14:44, 11 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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== The Manual ==
 
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The manual page is really funny in the way, that its English translation is more correct then the original Russian text :)
 
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* The word at the top of the page "Узнать" (Uznat') is correct, it really does mean "Find out";
 
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* The line "Кто лежит?" (Kto lezhit?) is a mistake and actually means here "Who is lying on the ground?" rather then "Who is telling lies/lying?". This is because in English the verb "to lie" can mean both of those things, but in Russian it's "лежать" (lezhat') for "lying on the ground" and "лгать" (lgat') for "telling the lies/lying". So the line should be "Кто лжет?" (Kto lzhet?);
 
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* The line "Кто говорит правду?" (Kto govorit pravdu?) is correct, it does mean "Who tells the truth?";
 
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* The line "Кто имеет яйцо?" (Kto imeet yaico?) is a bit incorrect and means "Who owns an egg?". "У кого яйцо?" (U kogo yaico?) could be translated as "Who has the egg?"
 
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Another note: The Arbat ST. (location of the seller) is a well-known street in Moscow (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arbat_Street).
 
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: This would be excellent information for the [[Some Type of Online Auction]] page, where the Arbat Street reference is already noted. {{User:Wbwolf/sig}} 00:33, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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== Musie Theater? ==
 
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I'm quite confident that the image given the label "Theater" is actually the museum. It looks just like an art museum display and... not at all like a movie theater. The other one's kind of ambiguous as to WHAT it is, but I'm quite sure on the "Theater". --{{User:Jay/sig}} 00:40, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:The other one looks like some kinda government building. Maybe if someone could translate the Russian on the building, it would shed some light on this? {{User:Has Matt?/sig}} 00:47, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:For now, I swapped the Theater one (pictures with a velvet rope) in the correct place. (Compare with the theater in [[the movies]])  I did notice that the one current marked "Museum" has some Russian writing on it.  If someone would translate that, in addition to finding out what how the image is marked internally, for now it's probably better to leave the images where they are. {{User:Wbwolf/sig}} 00:51, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::You... you swapped it from my swap. The one with the ropes looks more like an art museum. Why would the ropes be so close to the pictures otherwise? --{{User:Jay/sig}} 01:15, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::: I have seen plenty of movie theaters that have velvet ropes along the walls; they are used when they have people line up before the start of movie for a major opening.  The other picture is clearly ''not'' a movie theater, so we need to wait until we have further info. {{User:Wbwolf/sig}} 01:20, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::: But who was it that called it a "movie theater" in the first place? US! There is no "further info" besides maybe someone with a flash compiler or a translation of the pillar building. --{{User:Jay/sig}} 02:05, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::: Know what? Forget it. I don't want an edit war. I'm compromising with simple descriptions no one can dispute. --{{User:Jay/sig}} 02:35, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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It looks from [[#Names of People, Places and iTems|above]] that one of these (probably the one with the pillars) is a bank, but who knows with the weirdness of the rest of the names. {{User:Trey56/sig}} 00:58, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:If the one current marked as Museum is indeed a bank, I would have no problem making the other a museum.  Right now, it's unclear. {{User:Wbwolf/sig}} 01:29, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::Ok, so can we call the one with the velvet ropes a "Museum" now? -{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 03:50, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::I think that sounds reasonable. At first, I thought it was a movie theater, but the more I look at it, the more those look like pieces of art.  Especially the one on the left. {{User:Trey56/sig}} 03:57, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::::And y'know - who named that last one a "pier"?  Looks more like a bridge to me. -{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 04:15, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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The gray one with what looks like "bEPER" on it is a bank.  "берег" is Russian for "bank" according to some online English-Russian dictionary I just Googled. I submit that the one with the velvet ropes is an art musuem.  -{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 02:44, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:About the museum one, I think it's an ''art'' museum. {{User:Homestar-winner/sig}} 12:16, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::Agreed. &mdash; {{User:SamFisher1022/sig}} 12:23, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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== Glitch or not? ==
 
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Someone on the forums mentioned a glitch where, if you click on the top left corner a lot of times as the game starts, you can win with a timer score of 000. This is only if the person in the aquarium has the egg. I tried it and it worked, but I'm not sure if it's really a glitch or not. Thoughts? {{User:Shwoo/sig}} 03:55, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:Additionally, each time I've done it (by clicking the area of the screen where the Aquarium icon and gun icon overlap) the timer freezes at 000, but at the "Win" screen the timer reads 999 and all three spacecraft appear. -{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 04:23, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:: Just reproduced it myself, although given other Flash-related artifacts like this, I imagine that the way-way-way-way-way-too-generous timer starts at 1000 and it just chops off the first digit... and perhaps drops it down to a normal value afterwards. --{{User:Jay/sig}} 08:22, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::Don't know if it's really a "glitch" if it only works when the suspect in the ''aquarium'' has the egg. That would make it more a matter of luck. &mdash; {{User:SamFisher1022/sig}} 12:39, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::::Glitches that only happen under specific circumstances are still glitches. --{{User:Jay/sig}} 15:53, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::::Yes, but if the person in the aquarium has the egg, all you need to do is keep clicking the top left to finish the game in less than a second. That combined with the explanation you gave earlier about the timer actually being 1000 seconds, ''I'' think, completely disproves the glitch theory. &mdash; {{User:SamFisher1022/sig}} 19:34, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::::::The internal timer variable starts at 999 (which is what you see at the "win" screen), but the display in-game starts at 000 (not 1000) and is only updated a second after the game starts, the first time the "update timer" function's called. I think this qualifies as a minor glitch (namely that the display doesn't match the actual timer value for a second after the game starts). {{User:Phlip/sig}} 12:53, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::::::[http://youtube.com/watch?v=JqQ-r2mGe0Q Here] is a link to a video on youtube which shows someone winning when the timer displays 000. [[User:Don't press that button.|Don&#39;t press that button.]] 15:08, 19 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::::::::I don't consider this to be a glitch &mdash; just somebody beating the game really quickly with 1000 seconds left on the clock (which looks like 000 because only three digits are permitted). {{User:Trey56/sig}} 15:28, 19 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::::::::But it's not 1000 seconds left on the clock - it's 999 seconds (as you can see at the win screen).  The "glitch" is that the timer isn't visibly incremented down until it gets to 998.-{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 03:29, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::::::::::Yeah. I just managed to do that, twice! But yeah, it's not visibly incremented until a few seconds after the start of the game. &mdash; {{User:Znex/sig}} 05:00, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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== Jack Orlando ==
 
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Can anyone confirm the "Jack Orlando" Real-World Reference?  The screenshots I've seen of that game look absolutely nothing like this one. -{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 03:59, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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== Dead People Tell Tales? ==
 
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When I play the game, I killed someone and ask him about something and he replyed with a + sign. This should go into remarks I think. - Toonypie from the Fanstuff Wiki.
 
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: It's a red cross - they're only capable of answering questions with requests for medical aid, seeing as how they've been shot and all. [[User:Nsayer|Nsayer]] 18:45, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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==5 Time win with no intention==
 
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I won 5 times in this game just by going around and shooting 3 random people. It was awesome. YOU should try it!-MikeControl
 
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:I think more people would be interested if you told them on the IRC channel. {{User:Homestar-winner/sig}} 19:29, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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: You have a one-in-three chance of getting it right by shooting random people. Those aren't terrible odds, so your five times in a row was just luck. --{{User:Jay/sig}} 00:13, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:: That was sheer luck. I accidentally got 998 by clicking the gun after clicking the aquarium. --[[User:Jnelson09|Jnelson09]] 01:52, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::(1/3)^5 = 1/243. That's some luck. {{unsigned|68.121.111.150|12:21, 18 July 2007 (UTC)}}
 
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:::He never actually said he won five times in a row, just that he won five times. {{User:Has Matt?/sig}} 12:24, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:38%, not 33%.  1/9 (.111) on the first shot, 1/8 (.125) to then get it on the second and 1/7 (.143) to then get it on the third.  37.9%.  Big deal you say?  .379^5 is 1/128.  But yeah, don't know that it was five consecutive.--[[User:71.203.169.248|71.203.169.248]] 07:14, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::No, it's 33%.  You're picking three of nine.  If you really want to compute it the hard way, you have to take into account the probability of choosing incorrectly on the first and second tries.  So, there's a 1/9 (.111) chance of being right on the first try, a 8/9 * 1/8 (.888 * .125) chance of being wrong on the first try and right on the second try, and a 8/9 * 7/8 * 1/7 (.888 * .825 * .143) chance of being wrong twice and then right.  Add them all up and you get -- surprise, surprise -- a .333 chance of winning by shooting at random.
 
-
 
-
== Fabergé eggs? ==
 
-
 
-
When you talk about Russian eggs being stolen, it's almost certain that this is a reference to [[wikipedia:Fabergé_Eggs|Fabergé eggs]]. [[User:Nsayer|Nsayer]] 18:36, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:I guess it could be a reference to Fabergé eggs. But it could also be [[TTATOT]]. {{User:Sam the Man/sig}} 18:40, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
::I think the egg being stolen is just a joke (because no one would shoot a person to get back a stolen ''egg''). {{User:Homestar-winner/sig}} 19:04, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:::It could also be a reference to comunism (sp?) where nobody is allowed to have more than anouther person.  [[User:TreeWithAChainsaw|TreeWithAChainsaw]] 14:51, 11 August 2007 (UTC)
 
-
 
-
== Strategy shortcut ==
 
-
 
-
:''Because they cannot provide you with useful information, it is worthwhile to shoot the first two suspects you know to be lying. One of them might just have the egg.''
 
-
I'm not sure why this keeps getting removed. It seems like a reasonable strategy to me. After you've played the game a bit, you know you really only need one bullet. The other two are just going to waste. Why not use them on the liars? Their info is no good, and you may get lucky and finish with a better time. If it doesn't work out, then you've still got your last bullet to use in the conventional way. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 21:32, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:What's a waste of time is shooting suspects who may not have the egg. It's much better to be sure who the real culprit is than to leave it to luck, even if it turns out to be someone you've seen before. Like [http://forum.hrwiki.org/viewtopic.php?p=599475&highlight=#599475 this trick] I use. &mdash; {{User:SamFisher1022/sig}} 21:37, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
::It takes just over one extra second to shoot the liars. That seems an acceptable tradeoff for the amount of time it would take to keep going normally. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 22:44, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:::Well of course you can use any other strategy and just shoot any liars you come across. But that doesn't make this a strategy in itself. Any player could simply decide to do that; it doesn't take any real thought. &mdash; {{User:SamFisher1022/sig}} 22:50, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
::::No real thought? ''Au contraire!'' The suggestion is not to shoot people ''indiscriminantly'', but to shoot the first two liars you see (which takes some determining). You're not going back to a location where a liar is anyway&mdash;unless you have to confront the egg holder there. You could save a lot of time by going ahead and using your spare bullets before you leave the location. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 00:53, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:::::Uh, that's exactly what I just said. This does not take any "real thought" because it is not a strategy as much as it is an add-on to another strategy. Yes it takes "some determining" to recognize liars, but methods for doing so are described in any strategy (including strategies we don't know). And it is not "worthwhile" to shoot the first known liars because it is so uncertain whether they would actually have the egg; the point of a solid strategy is ensuring correctness. &mdash; {{User:SamFisher1022/sig}} 14:31, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
::::::Note that the way the game works, you don't lose anything for shooting innocent civilians, except the brief second it takes for the detour of the mouse. You only lose out if you get it wrong three times. So a strategy doesn't have to be certain or get it right first time to be "correct" or "worthwhile". The only thing you're graded on is how long it takes you to find the right culprit, on your third guess or better. Anything that speeds that up is worthwhile. Just 'cause shooting people "just in case" or guessing in detective work is generally considered a bad idea in real life doesn't mean it isn't sensible in the context of the game. {{User:Phlip/sig}} 14:40, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:::::::I'm inclined to agree with [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]]. You don't lose anything if you shoot two liars, except maybe a second, and the odds of getting lucky and shooting the guilty party are not all that bad. Additionally many people would not necessarily think of "Wasting" bullets on innocent civilians, so it is a worthwhile thing to record. &mdash; {{User:Geshmalderborgen/sig}} 20:28, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
 
-
I added a new strategy paragraph dealing with an observation I made regarding "bad liars".  I wasn't really sure if it might be considered a goof or if it was obviously intentional. Specifically, I had the Old Lady answer "potted plant" to two different suspects and then answer with her own picture when questioned about two different items that were not her own.  Additionally, I had a later session where a character indicated the mechanic when asked about the beer, but when asked about the mechanic, answered "pencil".  I'm starting to wonder if <i>all</i> liars will have <i>some</i> sort of inconsistency in their stories.  And does anyone know if the Egg Haver is always a liar? -{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 06:29, 19 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
 
-
:I recently did no less than 20 trials in a row. Every single time the person with the egg was a liar. Short of decompiling the flash, which is beyond my ability, I'm not sure if there is a way to truely know, but 20/20 seems pretty convincing. One other thing I paid attention to was if the person with the egg reliably pointed at someone else. More often than not, he was a "?," but considering most people are "?" I suspect this isn't an indicator.
 
-
:Assuming that the egg holder is alway a a liar, which I have come to belive he is, and considering that there are generally 3-4 liars, you have a 2/3-2/4 chance of discovering the egg holder just by shooting liars, which I'd say is actually a pretty decent strategy.
 
-
:Sometimes this strategy of discovering liars gives some amusing results, The most amusing one I encountered though was a liar who said he was the person with the egg, but didn't have it.[[User:75.180.26.208|75.180.26.208]] 08:12, 21 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
::Well, I've decompiled it and am browsing through the script now.  I'm not a professional programmer, but some of it is fairly straightforward.  Interestingly enough, I think I've already found a programming error that explains a strange response I documented earlier.  The code that tells a liar what suspect to answer when questioned about an item checks that the random answer doesn't match the liar's "item ID" instead of correctly checking against the liar's "suspect ID".  This means that a liar can answer with their own face when questioned about an item that isn't theirs.  That's definitely a glitch. -{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 17:31, 21 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:::No, it isn't. It is indeed a lie to say you have it when you don't. I suppose one could argue that it would have been better to program it so no one falsely incriminates themselves, but that's hardly a glitch. {{User:Qermaq/sig}} 18:45, 21 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
::::Ok, here we go - each section of the decompiled script has checks to ensure that a liar does not give their own location, item, or photo (or the "correct" ones, for that matter) as an answer when questioned about another item or person.  However, when a liar is questioned about an item, and is randomly assigned to answer with a photo (as opposed to a location), there is a check against an ITEM ID instead of a SUSPECT ID, which is incorrect.  I'm adding the relevant items back into the article, and have posted the offending source code snippet to [[User_Talk:ReverendTed|my Talk page]], because I didn't want to clutter up this discussion page with it.  -{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 18:57, 21 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
 
-
== Subtitles? ==
 
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-
I don't know if Where's an Egg? is one of the games that can be subtitled, but if so it could be neat to include approximate translations of the Russian...
 
-
 
-
My guess is that it's not possible to subtitle, though... {{User:Trey56/sig}} 21:48, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
 
-
Your guess is wrong. {{User:Mee/sig}} 22:24, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
 
-
:Well, partially &mdash; I was only able to subtitle [[Subtitles:wheresanegg/en|part of it]], since the rest of the text is embedded in movie files, I think. {{User:Trey56/sig}} 22:26, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
 
-
== Music ==
 
-
 
-
At the begining, when the Videlectrix logo apears, but before the guy shoots at it, the music playing is The Volga Boatmen's Song, traditional Russian song.
 
-
 
-
:That's awesome. (I just verified it) Great find! {{User:Trey56/sig}} 00:39, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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-
== Ron Cumberdale ==
 
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The character listed as "Kid Speedy" has red hair, but the real Kid Speedy has brown/gray hair. Ron Cumberdale from Peasant's Quest, however, has the same shirt AND red hair. Edit? [[User:75.119.20.104|75.119.20.104]] 01:34, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:<s>I agree. I think "Kid Speedy" is just an updated version of [[Ron Cumberdale]].</s> On second thought, I disagree. Look at these three photos.
 
-
 
-
<gallery>
 
-
Image:Where's an Egg - Suspects - Kid Speedy.png|WAE? suspect
 
-
Image:kidspeedy.PNG|Kid Speedy
 
-
Image:roncumberdale.PNG|Ron Cumberdale
 
-
</gallery>
 
-
 
-
The skin tone, dark red shorts, same darkred/white striped shirt, and red shoes all match. It's Kid Speedy. {{User:Bluebry/sig}} 01:37, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
 
-
As the one who originally suggested it as Kid Speedy, I concur with the original. [[User:Awexome Cross|Awexome Cross]] 04:27, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
 
-
:I agree &mdash; I think it's Kid Speedy. {{User:Trey56/sig}} 04:32, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
::Sorry, I was agreeing with the first one. [[User:Awexome Cross|Awexome Cross]] 04:34, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:::Oh, I see. In that case, I disagree &mdash; I think it's Kid Speedy. He's fat and has shorts instead of pants... {{User:Trey56/sig}} 04:32, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
::::I just edited it and put Kid Speedy back but kept the Ron Cumberdale thing in. Basically, we don't know who it is unless someone got told it was Kid Speedy/Ron Cumberdale by TBC. They're the only ones who truly know. &mdash; {{User:Znex/sig}} 09:21, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:::::I propose that it's "Kid Cumberdale" -{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 03:26, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
::::::No way. That's totally Ron Speedy. (Jeepers, that sounds like a bad Golden Age superhero...) --[[User:DorianGray|DorianGray]] 03:28, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:::::::Ron Speedy <b><i>IS</i></b> Kid Cumberdale <i><b>IN</b></i> "Where's an Egg?", an epic tale of crime and corruption where Justice isn't all it's cracked up to be - coming soon to a theater near you! -{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 06:26, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
 
-
==Dynamic Music==
 
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-
Has anyone else noticed how there is a base music track, and depending on which suspect you are interrogating, changes the extra line on top of it? eg, when you're interrogating blue guy with red hat, there's a sliding squarewave melody, and at the end when you get the medal, it has all the lines.
 
-
:Ummm...there's already a section about this back up the page. &mdash; {{User:Znex/sig}}
 
-
 
-
== Explanation about the Missing Points in my Last Edit ==
 
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-
If around one hour ago, you were wondering why that the red cross reply point and the Stalin point were missing, I can explain everything. Before, I think I reverted the page or something by accident to the last time that it had Kid Speedy in the characters thing and that version happened to not have those things. So sorry about that. Sorry. &mdash; {{User:Znex/sig}}
 
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-
== Not The Egg ==
 
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-
It seems rather clear thar "an egg" has an integral article--it is refered to as such even in situations where "the egg" would be more appropriate, as it is clear this egg is the only egg in the game. --[[User:71.221.232.189|71.221.232.189]] 17:22, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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I think it's a deliberate mistake by TBC, as it is dificult to determin in Russian, wether it's supposed to read "an egg" or "the egg".  Let me explain, this game is (presumably) supposed to look like it was made in Russia, then brought over here and had it's title poorly translated.  That is really a joke by TBC, as it parodies how forgin games often have poor translation - like all the "Engrish" that has been put into the Stinkoman games. [[User:MJN SEIFER|MJN SEIFER]] 16:39, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
 
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-
== Translation Error ==
 
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This is not the first time there has been a synonym based mistranslation on the site.  Here, they used the russian word for river bank instead of financial bank.  In Unnatural, Bub's title in Jappanese was "Man of Concession" meaning compromise instead of vending.  Think this should be mentioned?
 
-
:Nah, it could be a word pun and TBC just did it because it means different things. &mdash; {{User:Znex/sig}}
 
-
::I don't know whether it's noteworthy yet, but it is an interesting observation. TBC are obviously using some less-than-reliable method for generating their translations (although it makes me happy that they're trying to make stuff not just be gibberish). &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 01:44, 19 July 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:::Perhaps they used Babelfish? &mdash; {{User:Znex/sig}}
 
-
::::Nah, it's not Babelfish, that translates "Bank" as "Крен" (kren). Google Translate translates it as "Банка" (banka). However, Google finds http://www.rustran.com/ which, although it translates "Bank" as "Банк", it translates "Who is lying?" as "Кто лежит?" and "Who has an egg?" as "Кто имеет яйцо?" &ndash; both are the wording used in [[eggction]], and both are claimed to be wrong in that article. It even translates "Where's an egg?" as "Где - яйцо?", hyphen included. It's near the top of the Google results for "english russian translator" so I think it's reasonable to think they did a similar Google search, and used this site. I'm not quite sure how they got it to say "берег" but I'll keep prodding it. {{User:Phlip/sig}} 02:57, 19 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::::I was the one who first noted the берег-bank thing, and I figured it out using a Russian-English <i>dictionary</i> I found using a Google search and plugging in "museum" and "bank" into it to see if anything matched the inscription on the building.  I'll see if I can find that link and see if the rest of the stuff translates the same as well. Ok, I found it here [[http://www.freedict.com/onldict/rus.html]] but, being a dictionary, it doesn't translate phrases - only single words.  -{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 05:30, 19 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::::::An older example of this situation is Strong Bad's "Stark Dålig" from [[little questions]], since the latter word translates as "of poor quality". {{User:Heimstern Läufer/sig}} 09:36, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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==Sbemail Reference==
 
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There is no reference on the page anywhere to the sbemail that mentioned the game, i think it should be here
 
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:That is because none of the sbemails mention this game. {{User:The Chort/sig}} 17:30, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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::I think it was listed on a floppy disk once, but I've never seen those noted in Inside References elsewhere, so... -{{User:YK/sig}} 18:46, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::It was on a [[floppy disk container|floppy disk]] in the introductions for [[strongbad_email.exe Disc Three]] and [[strongbad_email.exe Disc Five|Disc Five]], but not in a Strong Bad Email. {{User:Has Matt?/sig}} 19:09, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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== Decompiled Script Findings ==
 
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I'm going to edit this as I find things in the decompiled script.
 
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*The suspect who has an Egg is always a liar.
 
-
*A liar's answers are randomly assigned for each suspect and item and are checked to ensure they aren't accidentally "correct".  They're also checked to ensure a liar doesn't answer with their own location, item, or picture, but the item-question photo-answer check has a programming error that causes it to malfunction.  The way they are randomly assigned <i>almost</i> guarantees that there will be some sort of inconsistency in a liar's answers (two of the same answers for different questions, or logical breaks like "suspect A has item 1 but item 1 belongs to suspect B").
 
-
*People have been suggesting that there are 3 or 4 liars per game, but the code seems to indicate 5 liars are assigned, meaning that there would be 5 or 6 liars per game depending on if it tried to assign "liar" status to the egg holder (who is already a liar).  So far, my in-game tests are confirming this.
 
-
*One honest suspect is selected at random to answer correctly about an Egg.  Three additional suspects are then chosen at random (which could include the one already selected) to give an answer about an Egg, which will be correct or incorrect based on whether that suspect is honest or a liar.  This means there will be 3 or 4 suspects who will give an answer about an Egg, and at least one will be correct.
 
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-{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 19:29, 21 July 2007 (UTC)
 
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==Programming error==
 
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"A programming error allows a liar to answer with their own picture when questioned about an item that isn't theirs". The liar always responds with a lie. How is it a goof that he lies and claims to own an item he does not? In traditional one-person-always-lies one-person-always-tells-the-truth logic puzzles, this is one way to out the liar, by asking him a question about himself. [[User:Nard|Nard]] 00:14, 8 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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-
:I agree with you &mdash; I wouldn't call that a goof. Actually, I think it's pretty hilarious; one time the butler told me had the egg, so I shot him. He did not have the egg. Anyways, I agree, and I think that the fact should be moved to Remarks. {{User:Trey56/sig}} 00:17, 8 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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::If it's something TBC could have avoided, Remarks, otherwise, Glitches. {{User:Bluebry/sig}} 00:21, 8 August 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:::Definitely not a glitch - how can we be sure this wasn't intentional to offer the player a strategic tool? It can be a remark, so long as we do not suppose it's a mistake, but just the way things were done. {{User:Qermaq/sig}} 02:10, 8 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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:This is a goof - it's a programming error explained in the "Decompiled Script Findings" just above this section, and I've got the offending source-code snippet on my Talk page to prove it. -{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 03:07, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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::You speak as if you're sure this was unintended. Can you really be so sure? {{User:Qermaq/sig}} 06:13, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::If it is a goof, then it's pretty dang minor if the only thing it does is make the liars lie.  So what if you found a faulty code snippet?  They probably noticed the mistake, then realized the mistake made it do what it was supposed to do anyway, and left it alone.  It's certianly not worth mentioning a mistake that could only ever be noticed by ripping the Flash file to shreds.--[[User:Antisexy|Antisexy]] 06:32, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
 
-
After looking at [[User talk:ReverendTed#Where's An Egg Source Code Snippet|the code]], I agree with ReverendTed that this is definitely a goof. Here is the relevant part, in English:
 
-
*You the player ask a suspect about one of the items.
 
-
*The game randomly selects whether the suspect will reply with a person or a place.
 
-
*If it selects to reply with a person, it then checks whether the suspect is a liar.
 
-
*If the suspect is a liar, the game randomly chooses a reply.
 
-
*The game first checks to make sure the randomly-chosen person is not the real answer to the question (otherwise the suspect wouldn't be lying).
 
-
*Then it checks to make sure the randomly-chosen <u>person</u> is not the same as the <u>item</u> at the current location. For example, "Is the man in the red hat equal to the pencil?" (Notice it doesn't ask whether the man ''has'' the pencil, but whether the man ''is'' the pencil.) <u>The answer to this question can never be true</u> (at least, not the way they intended; see ReverendTed's note below), and thus it is possible for a suspect to reply with their own face. For the question to make sense, the game should check whether the randomly-chosen person is the same as the <u>person</u> at the current location.
 
-
When the game makes similar checks in other places, the code is correct:
 
-
*If you ask about an item and a liar replies with a place, the game checks to make sure the randomly-chosen place is not the current location.
 
-
*If you ask a liar about a person, the game checks to make sure that either randomly-chosen item is not the item at the current location or that the randomly-chosen place is not the current location.
 
-
Even though this error results in a slight advantage for the player, I don't believe it was intentional on the part of the programmer. Otherwise, instead of having the game check to see whether characters are the same as items, it just wouldn't check anything at all. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 16:09, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:But still, all the goof does is make the liar lie.  The only way it could possibly be known that it's a goof is by decompiling the Flash file and reading the script.  This would be like if they had a comment tag in a script that said <code><//-- make marsipans face turn red here --//></code>, and we listed the goof that they misspelled Marzipan.  The goof is irrelevant outside the code.--[[User:Antisexy|Antisexy]] 16:38, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
 
-
::No, that would be entirely different. That scenario would not affect anything in the toon, but this programming error actually affects the game. [[User:Hagurumon|Hagurumon]] 16:44, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:::But in a way that is virtually unnoticable--[[User:Antisexy|Antisexy]] 16:46, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
 
-
::::The goof does not make the liar lie. What's happening is that the program is trying to make sure the liar doesn't reply with his or her own face, but the goof prevents this check from ever happening. I would not characterize this as "virtually unnoticeable". In fact, when a suspect replies with his or her own face, it is ''very'' noticeable. In addition, we are looking at the code for clues about the actual gameplay, not nitpicking comments. The fact that the only way to discover that this is a goof is by looking at the code does not make it less of a goof. On the contrary, I think it makes it even more interesting. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 16:52, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::::You ask about an item and he lies and says he has it when he doesn't.  I don't see why that's such a big goof.  Yeah, the program's not supposed to let him reply with his own face, but why does it matter that it does?  It just makes him lie about something.--[[User:Antisexy|Antisexy]] 16:59, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
 
-
::::::In my opinion, the fact that you can only know it's a goof by looking at the code only makes it irrelevant to the toon.  If we had a page that listed errors in the Flash files (do we?), that would be the place to list something like this.--[[User:Antisexy|Antisexy]] 17:03, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:::::::While playing the game, I wondered if they meant for it to work the way it does. Now, looking at the code, I can see that it was most likely a mistake, which is rightly noted in this article. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 17:13, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
 
-
::::::::Well, how 'bout if we at least reword it?  "A programming error allows a liar to answer with their own picture when questioned about an item that isn't theirs" makes it sound like it's obvious that they're not supposed to answer with their own face, but I don't think it's that obvious.  How about "A liar isn't supposed be able to answer with their own picture when questioned about an item that isn't theirs.  A programming error allows them to do this."--[[User:Antisexy|Antisexy]] 17:20, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:::::::::It was my wording in the first place, so perhaps I'm a bit biased, but I think the original wording of the Goof ("A programming error allows a liar to answer with their own picture when questioned about an item that isn't theirs") was the most succinct way to describe it accurately.  The new wording says basically the same thing but takes a good deal longer to get the point across, though I suppose I can see the benefit of alluding to the other checks that DO function correctly. -{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 16:25, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
 
-
:One clarification to It's dot com's description above (as if this issue wasn't confounding enough already) - The person, item, and location IDs are simply numerical indexes of 1 through 9, so asking if "Person X" is Equal to "Item Y" could <i>sometimes</i> be true - it's just that the offending check eliminates one <i>random</i> person (the character whose personal ID matches the randomly-selected number of the liar's item ID) instead of eliminating the <i>intended</i> person (the number of the liar's personal ID). -{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 16:38, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
 
-
Regarding the timer, Phlip made {{p|l=http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php?title=Where%27s_an_Egg%3F&diff=481346&oldid=481345 this edit}} moving it to the goofs section, and I'm assuming he had a reason for putting it there instead of glitches. I'm bringing it up here so that perhaps he or someone can shed some light on what specifically makes this a goof. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 19:19, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
 
-
::Ok, so here's what I've found.  Some aspects of the code are a little out of my league, but this is my understanding of the issue:
 
-
::*The timer graphic begins as plain text "000".
 
-
::*The internal timer itself is initialized at 999, the internal timer function calls itself (I think?), then a CallBack function is started at a 1 second interval.
 
-
::*The CallBack function (apparently after the first 1 second interval) immediately decrements the timer by 1 (to 998) and then calls the function to draw the timer.
 
-
::Unfortunately, my Windows search function is acting up, making it difficult to trace relations in the various script files, but it appears to me that the code is <i>supposed</i> to update the timer graphic immediately after initializing the internal timer to 999 by calling itself, but calling itself doesn't actually update the graphic (and accomplishes nothing, as far as I can tell, though this is one of those aspects of the code that I'm not entirely confident with) - since the CallBack function uses different code for that. So, I think it's a programming <u>goof</u>, and not necessarily a <u>glitch</u>.  -{{User:ReverendTed/sig}} 18:10, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
 
-
 
-
== Why are you reverting these edits? ==
 
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-
I keep seeing edits being reverted that are factual, including mine and someone else's, but removed because the game isn't "russian" when there is a lot of RUSSIAN stuff in the game.
 
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* Everything is written in russian.
 
-
* The guy at the end is a pixel look alike of Josef Stalin.
 
-
* The three spaceships that fly by are all russian made.
 
-
* The three spaceships are a reference to Tetris, a russian video game.
 
-
* The wiki itself explains that the game has russian references (read the *WHOOPS!* article, especially the trivia section!)
 
-
The edits were...
 
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* The fact the game is in Russian meaning you can't understand what's going on and have to make guess work.
 
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* The fact that on the "Some Type of Online Auction" page a reference to the film ''Man With the Screaming Brain'' is made, and the specific reference is about a russian.
 
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If you're going to remove our edits of things we found in the game based on Russia then remove ALL topics in the game based on russia. Which would include the whole article!
 
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Explain yourselves!
 
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-<s>[[Skunk|User:Skunk]]</s> (I'm not logged in because this and others were quick edits.) <small>({{user|64.18.124.101}} 08:43, 10 August 2007)</small>
 
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:The game doesn't require any actual knowledge of Russian to play, however. That's why. --[[User:DorianGray|DorianGray]] 08:47, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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::Furthermore, even if you did know Russian, you still would be quite clueless. --{{User:Super Martyo Brother/sig}} 09:52, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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: Don't worry. It's not you. Despite the wording of the [HRWiki:Introduction|Introduction page], in my experience nobody is really allowed to contribute anything without undergoing an inordinate amount of nitpicking. I'll bet anyone $100 that if TBC themselves came to the site anonymously and made a correction that it would get reverted. [[User:Nsayer|Nsayer]] 15:36, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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::I second that.
 
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::*The main objective "Where's the egg?" is in Russian.  Not being able to read that ''does'' make the game harder 'cause you have no idea what the crap is going on.
 
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::*"Mobile is the future, my main man!" seems like a generic enough phrase, but if it's an exact quote, it's an exact quote.  And furthermore, if the specific quote is about a Russian, it seems likely that it was intentional.
 
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::--[[User:Antisexy|Antisexy]] 16:41, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::Nsayer: It's easy to propose that kind of bet, given that it can't be backed up at all. Let's examine two instances of anonymous editing on [[Ryan Sterritt]]'s page. I believe that he or someone who knows him made {{p|l=http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php?title=Ryan_Sterritt&diff=357704&oldid=354862 this collective edit}}, the information from which is still in the article. In that case, the information was relevant to the article and easily verifiable, and the nature of the edit made it easy to trust its accuracy. On the other hand, look at {{p|l=http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php?title=Ryan_Sterritt&diff=472607&oldid=439626 this edit}}. It could have been added by Ryan, or it could be someone speculating. We have no way to know, since the editor didn't provide any information to support it. Thus, even though it might very well be true, it was removed. Surely you can see that we have to have some kind of standard for inclusion if we want our pages to be looked at as anything but haphazard guesswork. If you want to speculate, fine. We have these talk pages and the forum for that. But we should keep speculation in the articles proper to a minimum (and yes, we do make exceptions). Furthermore, you can't lump all anonymous contributions into one category. I'm all the time seeing anonnies make edits that are so good that they [[User talk:24.242.28.135|are]] [[User talk:220.239.8.173|encouraged]] [[User talk:220.239.8.173|to]] [[User talk:68.145.103.189|create]] [[User talk:72.128.106.87|an]] [[User talk:68.63.159.4|account]]. I myself was invited to join in the same manner.
 
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:::Both you and Antisexy seem to be convinced that this editor is being unfairly beaten down by the Big Bad Wiki Machine. You don't even bother to look at the actual edits and judge them on their merits. Antisexy does at least attempt to address the edits specifically, but he's basing his arguments on what was written here on this talk page as opposed to what was put in the article. So let's look at the diffs themselves:
 
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:::*{{p|l=http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php?title=Where%27s_an_Egg%3F&diff=487612&oldid=487314 Rev 487612}}: Meh, maybe this could have been reworded rather than being removed outright, but as written it's not really accurate. The game is actually played entirely through pictures, not another language per se. The Russian is just a red herring.
 
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:::*{{p|l=http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php?title=Where%27s_an_Egg%3F&diff=487270&oldid=485380 Rev 487270}}: Never mind the fact that auction has [[Some Type of Online Auction|its own page]], "What is up, my main man?" is not the same as "Mobile is the future, my main man!". "My main man" is a common enough phrase (and ''Man with the Screaming Brain'' is an obscure enough movie) that I firmly believe it's a coincidence. If you convince enough people otherwise, or that the coincidence itself is worth noting, then we'll note it, but if not then we've got to draw the line ''somewhere''. Maybe you think a lot of speculation is good for articles. I, however, think it just waters them down.
 
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:::[[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 19:27, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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::::I '''did''' look up the actual edits and considered how well they fit in the article.  I didn't see what was so wrong with them.  The latter more so than the former, though.
 
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::::*{{p|l=http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php?title=Where%27s_an_Egg%3F&diff=487612&oldid=487314 Rev 487612}}: "The game recreates the trial-and-error aspects and confusion of playing games in another language." Pretty much exactly what I thought when I first played it.  There's certainly a lot of trial and error in figuring out how to play this game.  And although there's no Russian during the actual gameplay, the Russian before and after adds greatly to the confusion.  Heck, after the game was over, I wasn't even sure if I'd won or not.
 
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::::*{{p|l=http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php?title=Where%27s_an_Egg%3F&diff=487270&oldid=485380 Rev 487270}}: This one is so minor, that even if it was intentional, it doesn't really ''need'' to be noted.  I've never heard of ''Man With the Screaming Brain''.  And "mobile is the future, my main man" seems like a common enough phrase.  But if it '''is''' an exact quote, and in the movie, they '''are''' talking about a Russian, that I think that'd be to much for just a coincidence.  (Or is the line in the movie just "my main man?"  If so, yeah, this is bogus.)  If it were to be mentioned, it would be better here than on the [[Some Type of Online Auction|STOA]] page, unless we make a separate page for the manual and the auction thereof (which would be silly).
 
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::::[[User:Antisexy|Antisexy]] 20:43, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::::I'd be unhappy with the first fact, because it's basically speculation. Yes, some people see the connection when they play the game, and I can definitely see this being true. But we don't know if that was the actual intention of TBC, so it's a bit too bold to claim that it is. What we usually do is note this on the talk page, as we've now done. As for the second fact, there is currently only one Google result for the phrase in question [http://www.google.co.nz/search?q=%22mobile%20is%20the%20future%2C%20my%20main%20man%22]. I haven't seen the movie myself, but it doesn't seem to be a quote from anywhere.{{User:Loafing/sig}} 21:11, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::::::I am the one who reverted the "my main man" fact and i stand by it. To add to what loafing said, the phrase "my main man" has over [http://www.google.co.nz/search?hl=en&q=%22my+main+man%22&btnG=Search&meta= 224,000 google hits], hence showing it to be a common phrase and not based on that movie. Furthermore, to Nsayer and whoever else, I judge edits based on content and content alone. There have been many times when [http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php?title=rock_opera&diff=prev&oldid=479069 I've] [http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php?title=Cardboard_Marzipan&diff=prev&oldid=467397 reverted] [http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php?title=DNA_Evidence&diff=prev&oldid=456825 even] [http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php?title=dangeresque_3&diff=prev&oldid=478669 the] [http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php?title=mini-golf&diff=prev&oldid=488970 more] [http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php?title=marzipan&diff=prev&oldid=487197 experienced] [http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php?title=Quality_Time&diff=prev&oldid=487136 users]. So please stop getting all bent out of shape about your edits not getting in, and please continue to edit, and if the content is deemed good by the community, I guarantee you it will stay. Nothing to get discouraged about. {{User:DeFender1031/sig}} 22:36, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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::::::..groan.. It's always gotta be "actual intentions," does it?  Actually, I didn't really notice where this (the one about the game being hard to understand) was originally placed.  It ''is'' a bit to speculative for the summary, but wouldn't be okay under Remarks??--[[User:Antisexy|Antisexy]] 21:22, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::::::If we say "The game recreates..." or anything of the like, wouldn't you think that we strongly imply that this was intentional?{{User:Loafing/sig}} 21:29, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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::::::::Yes, but confusion is such an obvious element in this game, how can not be intentional?  Are we only debating whether or not the foreign language was an intended to add to the confusion?  It seems very likely to me.--[[User:Antisexy|Antisexy]] 21:36, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::::::::Just to get the "mobile is the future, my main man" bit out of the way, as best as I can tell, the entire phrase is a TBC original, and it only shares "my main main" with the movie. A connection isn't impossible, but it's a stretch. We seem to be in agreement on that. Regarding the other part, we're just talking about a description at the top, not so much a fun fact. We've got a bit of latitude to say what we want. Part of the humor of the game is that you have to figure out what the crap is going on, which I believe is completely intentional, and we should comment on it if it can be worded concisely. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 21:43, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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::::::::::So it's all down to the wording, is that it? How about "The Russian text in the game is intended to confuse the player, but the game itself is played almost entirely through pictures." (eh, not too good). If we ''can'' word it efficiently, I think we should also have the reader refer to the Translations section. &mdash; {{User:SamFisher1022/sig}} 21:59, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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::::::::::Hmm... Well, I went up to read the opening summary as it is now to see how we might be able to fit all that in, but now that I look at it, the direct quote from Videlectrix does a pretty good job at summing up confusion and foreign language/bad translation.  So then... I guess it's fine as is.  I still think the original edit "The game recreates the trial-and-error aspects and confusion of playing games in another language" would look nice and pretty in remarks, but I guess I'm the only one.--[[User:Antisexy|Antisexy]] 22:04, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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:::::::::::Meh, it seems to obvious for a full-fledged remark. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 22:20, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
 
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==Russian dialogue==
 
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Why is the dialogue in Russian? [[User:MHarrington|MHarrington]] 07:00, 13 November 2007 (UTC)
 
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:Why not? =3 --[[User:DorianGray|DorianGray]] 07:02, 13 November 2007 (UTC)
 
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== Tron ==
 
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Does anyone think that [[:Image:Where's an Egg - Suspects - Mechanic.png|one of the men]] is Tron? I think he looks a lot like a pixelated version of him. {{User:Homestar-winner/sig}} 21:45, 30 January 2008 (UTC)
 
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:no way to really tell. {{User:DeFender1031/sig}} 21:47, 30 January 2008 (UTC)
 
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::I disagree with both of you. I think it's easy to tell that he doesn't look like Tron all that much at all. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 00:01, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
 
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== Heavy plays "Where's an Egg?" ==
 
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In ''[[Poker Night at the Inventory]]'', the Heavy reveals that he only plays one video game.  To [[Strong Bad]]'s surprise, it's ''Where's an Egg?''  Should this be mentioned in the article? - [[User:SnakeBoxer202|SnakeBoxer202]] 23:32, 28 November 2010 (UTC)
 
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:It already is. [[User:Flicky1991|Flicky1991]] 09:08, 29 November 2010 (UTC)
 

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