25:21 There is no concept of a "negligible statement". All statements are either true or false. There are either 2 true statements and 1 false one, or the other way around, i.e. 2 false statements and 1 true one. In this particular case, you can see right away that the first two statements (on the blue and white boxes) are false. Therefore the third one (on the black box) has to be true. The true statement directly tells you where the gems are, in the blue box.
I definitely was reading the instructions improperly. All statements are true or false is the way I need to approach this. I was negating one of the boxes statements when it was actually the deciding factor. Thank you for the advice. Looking back I feel like an idiot and I promise I'm still going to struggle with it still haha.
26:16 If you're struggling for the answer with any of the logic puzzles, remember this: You need to decouple the truth-false statements from the gems in the boxes themselves. The rules themselves state so: One box has a label above that is always truthful. One box has a label above that is always lying. One of these three boxes has gems. The third line simply says "One of these three boxes has gems". It could be the box telling the truth, it could be the box telling lies, it could be the box whose identity is unconfirmed (can go either way). There is no rule or promise that "the truth-telling box will always contain gems" within the rules. Such puzzles usually require you to use the truth-lie nature against itself (e.g. two gatekeepers, one who lies & the other who doesn't, ask them "Where would the other gatekeep want me to go?" and head to the gate both aren't pointing at) to find the answer cleverly. If need be, use Microsoft Excel or something to help with your assumptions on which is truth & which is lying.
I know this is my over but to xoear up the parlor game the wording in the three clues is very important. Atleast 1 is true and atleast one is false and one box has the prize. What anyone needs to do is make sure that all three are not false and all three are not true. Any single box could have the gems and the phrases tell you which box they are in if you decipher the statements correctly.
I made a huge mistake and created a rule in my head that was not true. Moving forward the puzzles should be solvable with a little bit of effort as I retrain the way I look at them. I appreciate the insight, thank you!
im excited for more of these :D and i was so happy when you turned down the music a bit lol i think you may need to actually click 'check item' to check in an item, but hopefully not
Going back and watching the footage now, I realize how much louder the music is through OBS than compared to my headset. I'm about to just turn it down significantly more than where I had it. Unfortunately I think I turned it back up so you're going to have another episode or two of pumped up ambient music😄.
Spoiler: You can open the wooden gate outside. Spoiler again: you need to get power to the garage and open the garage door Sorry for the edit, I'm still watching. About the parlor boxes it says AT LEAST one box is lying\telling the truth, so there can be more than one lying\telling the truth boxes
Yeahhhh. You are in for a rough few more episodes of me following the made up rules in my head and making the puzzle more difficult than it should be haha. I'm glad I know now, but that doesn't stop me from getting wrong even on my new runs.
This would be true but I kept explaining the rules wrong. They are all true false statements and I need to use all the clues to get the answer. Not paying attention on my part has made those much harder and confusing to watch.
25:21 There is no concept of a "negligible statement". All statements are either true or false. There are either 2 true statements and 1 false one, or the other way around, i.e. 2 false statements and 1 true one.
In this particular case, you can see right away that the first two statements (on the blue and white boxes) are false. Therefore the third one (on the black box) has to be true. The true statement directly tells you where the gems are, in the blue box.
I definitely was reading the instructions improperly. All statements are true or false is the way I need to approach this. I was negating one of the boxes statements when it was actually the deciding factor. Thank you for the advice. Looking back I feel like an idiot and I promise I'm still going to struggle with it still haha.
26:16 If you're struggling for the answer with any of the logic puzzles, remember this:
You need to decouple the truth-false statements from the gems in the boxes themselves.
The rules themselves state so:
One box has a label above that is always truthful.
One box has a label above that is always lying.
One of these three boxes has gems.
The third line simply says "One of these three boxes has gems". It could be the box telling the truth, it could be the box telling lies, it could be the box whose identity is unconfirmed (can go either way). There is no rule or promise that "the truth-telling box will always contain gems" within the rules.
Such puzzles usually require you to use the truth-lie nature against itself (e.g. two gatekeepers, one who lies & the other who doesn't, ask them "Where would the other gatekeep want me to go?" and head to the gate both aren't pointing at) to find the answer cleverly. If need be, use Microsoft Excel or something to help with your assumptions on which is truth & which is lying.
I know this is my over but to xoear up the parlor game the wording in the three clues is very important. Atleast 1 is true and atleast one is false and one box has the prize.
What anyone needs to do is make sure that all three are not false and all three are not true. Any single box could have the gems and the phrases tell you which box they are in if you decipher the statements correctly.
I made a huge mistake and created a rule in my head that was not true. Moving forward the puzzles should be solvable with a little bit of effort as I retrain the way I look at them. I appreciate the insight, thank you!
im excited for more of these :D and i was so happy when you turned down the music a bit lol
i think you may need to actually click 'check item' to check in an item, but hopefully not
Going back and watching the footage now, I realize how much louder the music is through OBS than compared to my headset. I'm about to just turn it down significantly more than where I had it. Unfortunately I think I turned it back up so you're going to have another episode or two of pumped up ambient music😄.
@@Bragappleno worries, but thank you for the heads up haha :)
The "9083" was on a red memo, so that's the only sequence that CAN'T be the real code for the safe.
(I'm guessing you figured this out already)
Spoiler:
You can open the wooden gate outside. Spoiler again: you need to get power to the garage and open the garage door
Sorry for the edit, I'm still watching. About the parlor boxes it says AT LEAST one box is lying\telling the truth, so there can be more than one lying\telling the truth boxes
Yeahhhh. You are in for a rough few more episodes of me following the made up rules in my head and making the puzzle more difficult than it should be haha. I'm glad I know now, but that doesn't stop me from getting wrong even on my new runs.
The gems are in the blue box is the true statement so it could be in the blue box or the white box smh. Where is the logic?
This would be true but I kept explaining the rules wrong. They are all true false statements and I need to use all the clues to get the answer. Not paying attention on my part has made those much harder and confusing to watch.
@@Bragapple yeah I get that, it’s just the way in which you confused yourself was funny. Glad to hear you figured it out lol