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Wikipedia bridge of links game
I had a thought for a game using wikipedia. You start at a given page and by clicking on links in the page you try to navigate to a completely unrelated page. You must stay in wikipedia, you can't type, or select and search, or cut and paste. You can only use hyperlinks to another wikipedia page.
Open the links in new tabs and make a screen shot of your tabs. Whoever has the fewest tabs to get to the destination page wins. You cannot go backwards. First pair: Start at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Conan_Doyle and try to get to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obsidian Might be fun. |
Wow, that was easier than I thought. I got there in 4 clicks. Will post my screenshot later.
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So this is more of a spectator game? :lol:
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4 clicks
Fossil (located in the 5th paragraph of the Spiritualism section of Doyle's entry.) Rock Volcanic Rock Obsidian |
No, you should try it and see how many clicks it takes you. Then see how many clicks to get from Obsidian to Lux Interior. (7 for me)
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Surely the objective has to be Mornington Crescent?
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I guess I didn't understand. I'm still not sure I do.
So the first person to get there gets to choose the next destination? Or do we have a list of pit stops to make along the way to a final destination? |
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Why don't you choose a new start and first destination? |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babbit_bearing first destination http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esperanto |
It's harder than I thought. No going backwards? I'm stuck in a loop of languages. Trying to find Esperanto. Once, I accidentally translated the page I was on into Esperanto, but that didn't help.
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It's harder when you don't know a lot about the destination. I know esperanto is an invented language, but not much else about it.
I'll give it a try. |
When you say "You cannot go backwards," does that mean you can't back up if you hit a dead end? Or you can't try to work backwards to the start from the destination?
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Babbitt>United States>Invasion of Poland>Second Polish Republic>Bialystock>Esperanto.
I had to lookup the name of the inventor, I used to know it, but forgot. True. |
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