I mean in Kanji, we do have words that is the same by contains different meanings too ![]()
soooo many pathways ![]()
That is correct xD
Which icon?
I believe people were talking about the third glyph (this image is not so good, sorry)
They seem very similar to me aside from the very tip, which could be just antialiasing in-game…
I’m comfortable calling it the “same.” There’s a bit of style difference, but I think it’s likely one is based on the other…
Here are all the WT glyphs for those interested. The one currently unused on the site is same as the one in WT hexagon center but white. So I guess the current red one will become white at some point or has been white before?
Avid NMS player here.
That icon in the game screenshot is a marker for where you park your ship. That’s all. Just so you remember where your ship is.
However, it is identical to the glyph on the WT page.
I’m looking at the rest and not seeing any other similar icons though, bit I’ll keep looking.
thanks for sharing - and it seems grey means inactive, white means active but not complete and red is complete
The unused glyph is labeled glyph3
I see a few similarities in the other glyphs. The eighth one looks kinda like an anomaly and the one next to that looks like one of the dinosaurs from one of the trailers the one below the anomaly looking one could be a galaxy or black hole
The centered icon in the hexagon is actually part of ‘sigil.png’. This image is being live updated with your progress and also contains the triangles (green/red) within the hexagon. Some Javascript is involved and can not be fooled to progress ahead of time ![]()
It is however possible to mess with the looks of the site, even with SVG if you are familiar with it. You can disable the effects used and alter some other things in CSS for a clearer look at things. For the effects, ‘jquery-ripples’ is being used for example. This can be easily disable with the following console command in developer mode: $(“.jquery-ripples”).ripples(‘destroy’)
See: GitHub - sirxemic/jquery.ripples: Add a water ripple effect to your background using WebGL.
Did anyone look around the nearby systems for other discoveries / pods left by the same person?
Can anyone link me to where this hex address is mentioned or where it is decoded from? Can’t find the source ![]()
Pretty much described here:
https://forums.etarc.org/t/97c-303n-5884-p-discussion/173
The p̲a̲c̲k̲a̲g̲e̲ contained a code in Base64: MDEzRDowMDc4OjA3MjQ6MDA1Ng==
This translated to: 013D:0078:0724:0056
This was then tried as coordinates in NMS where a next clue was found.
Edit: corrected .pdf to package
Oh right super thanks! I thought for some reason that this was a SECOND coordinate linking WT with NMS, I was already aware of the first one (instance16status). gosh I need to sleep! Thanks for your answer though, appreciate it! ![]()
While staring at the hexagonal glyph, I couldn’t help but notice it could also be viewed as a cube. Except the viewpoint of the cube would have opposing corners lining up, making it look flat and very much like a hexagon with lines going to the center.
Furthermore, that particular glyph has a dot (maybe two??) in one of the sections (top left), and maybe one in the bottom right? This leads me to think it could be a map with an x, y, z destination.
But from what I’ve seen with the first two glyphs, they offer PDF’s with Memos from people associated with the Atlas Foundation. Greek Mythology seems to be evident. The first glyph looks a bit like waves. The Answer to the puzzle is “Orion,” a greek god who had the ability to walk on water.
The second glyph, which looks like the tri-force with an upside-down triangle in the middle, offers a PDF with a photo of the item that was dropped - a boat on wavy water. The triangle is used in ancient greek for ‘delta.’ Since greek mythology is prevalent, I looked it up and found a coinciding mathematical interchange for the language, offering hex and decimal encodings of the symbol. I’m not a math guy, but I can see something like this being used to hide a coordinate or something.
Other than that, the only other greek letter I can see a similarity to is the center glyph which looks like the greek letter ‘Psi.’
I’m not sure how far the whole Greek Mythology thing goes, but those were just things I noticed right off the bat while looking at them.
In case you missed it, you might be interested in what I found out about the image shown in the .pdf for the package that was dropped.
https://forums.etarc.org/t/seychelles-message-just-came-online/209/23?u=devilinpixy

