![]() ![]() This year's puzzle began slightly differently. Those who had failed two years in a row had no choice but to wait and hope the pattern would repeat itself. Again, the image led to a series of puzzles again, the puzzles eventually pointed to locations in the real world and again, the trail was abruptly closed off to all but the best players. Our search for intelligent individuals now continues," it began. Then, on January 5 2013, exactly a year and a day after the first posting, a new image was uploaded onto 4chan's /b/ message board. But only the fastest movers ever got to see what was on the page: it was shortly blanked, and replaced with the statement "We want the best, not the followers." For those deemed "followers", Cicada was over. The final puzzle directed players to an address for a website on Tor, the anonymous browser now best known for its use by the Silk Road black market. When the game moved into the real world – a series of GPS co-ordinates were posted, leading to QR codes attached to lampposts over five different nations, from Poland to Australia – it was clear that no single person could hope to solve everything.īut as quickly as the co-operation was encouraged, it was snuffed out. But as participants fell deeper into the rabbit hole, the references became less obvious – one clue involved a poem from a collection of medieval Welsh manuscripts, another a quote from a William Gibson book which was only released on 3.5 inch floppies.Ĭo-operating on chatrooms and message boards, a growing collection of puzzle solvers broke the codes, one by one. The first few were just about solvable by a canny individual working alone, requiring little more than mild coding ability and wordplay to get past. ![]() That message led to a series of puzzles, each harder than the last. Photograph: Cicada 3301 Photograph: Cicada 3301
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