Isn’t it? ![;)](<fileStore.core_Emoticons>/emoticons/002.png “;)”)
What?
Too vodka ![:004j:](<fileStore.core_Emoticons>/emoticons/004j.png “:004j:”)
It’s task ![:)](<fileStore.core_Emoticons>/emoticons/001j.png “:)”) Easy one, need to do decryption
CD keys for next release Star Conflict: Ellydium Edition
looks like an hexa encrypted.
No sequence repetitions, no double letters, short text, no hint…
We’re gonna need more than that I think in order to decrypt.
37 minutes ago, millanbel said:
No sequence repetitions, no double letters, short text, no hint…
We’re gonna need more than that I think in order to decrypt.
I’m pretty sure it’s something like “20/12/2016” encrypted.
Because the number of blocks correspond.
And the text displayed is strictly the same to the russian text. If it was a sentence or even just a word, the crypt would change between russian and english right ?
14 minutes ago, Swifter43021 said:
I’m pretty sure it’s something like “20/12/2016” encrypted.
Because the number of blocks correspond.
And the text displayed is strictly the same to the russian text. If it was a sentence or even just a word, the crypt would change between russian and english right ?
Well I have never seen a simple cryptogram with both letters and numbers in the coded version and google told me there are none. And as you say there is no way it work both in English and in Russian anyhow. So I don’t think it’s actually a coded sentence. It could be a date, yes, but I really don’t see how.
I looked on the Russian forum also and they seem to think it’s not actually a cipher but rather part of a URL to an image or something. If that is the case then calling it “encrypted” is very misleading since it got me trying to figure out a code.
2 hours ago, CinnamonFake said:
It’s task ![:)](<fileStore.core_Emoticons>/emoticons/001j.png “:)”) Easy one, need to do decryption
As for encryption with both numbers and letters, they do exist.
O24e9 .C68b4 Od125 M4874
G626d Ua81d A8e98 Z01ae
Let’s try the easy way - skip the letters and symbols and focus on hex dublets:
24e968b4d1254874626da81d8e9801ae
we have 32 characters here. In the previous cipher, gyazo was used, so let’s try it:
image not found. Let’s swap top row with bottom one:
626da81d8e9801ae24e968b4d1254874
But something tells me that’s not all ![:)](<fileStore.core_Emoticons>/emoticons/001j.png “:)”)
hm… letters are coming to : GUAZO.COM … and here is why top and bottom rows should be swapped ![:)](<fileStore.core_Emoticons>/emoticons/001j.png “:)”) also Russian “u” is written as “y”, hence gyazo.com
nice puzzle!
3 minutes ago, niripas said:
O24e9 .C68b4 Od125 M4874
G626d Ua81d A8e98 Z01ae
Let’s try the easy way - skip the letters and symbols and focus on hex dublets:
24e968b4d1254874626da81d8e9801ae
we have 32 characters here. In the previous cipher, gyazo was used, so let’s try it:
image not found. Let’s swap top row with bottom one:
626da81d8e9801ae24e968b4d1254874But something tells me that’s not all ![:)](<fileStore.core_Emoticons>/emoticons/001j.png “:)”)
4 minutes ago, Sinaka said:
Yup. Cuz if you swap top row with the bottom one the capital letters give GUAZO.COM
yup, noticed that ![:D](<fileStore.core_Emoticons>/emoticons/006j.png “:D”)
So… the whole puzzle was just to find that picture? That’s a bit anticlimactic. It’s not even good quality and doesn’t show the full map or anything. Do we fight outside? Inside that tunnel? Is it even a tunnel…?
21 hours ago, PapyMcBites said:
And what could this be???
HYYYYPE! they look soo cool! so that what dev’s worked on durring all this time :'D!
higher res:
Spoiler