M&M riddle game
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DING DING DING DING DING!!!Mutare Drake wrote:*feverishly thinking* Okay, how 'bout the dwarves in the red dwarf mine?
Sit me pretty on a shelf—a ROCK SHELF, as the dungeon is a mine
Made as sturdy as my self—they’re in a stone dungeon, made of stone
Name me or my ruby kin—I considered being extra evil and holding out for one of their actual names, but I figure next to no one actually takes much note of those petty details, and once you know what the riddle’s referring to it’s just a matter of going through the game and looking it up.
All on a world in the Spinward Rim —self explanatory
The corundum’s conundrum—if you do enough research on gemstones for whatever reason, you’ll learn that rubies and sapphires are actually the same stone—they’re corundums. The ONLY difference between the two is color—rubies are red (and sometimes pink, depending on where you are), sapphires are everything else. Thus by “ruby” the riddle means “red”.
And fame’s later game—none of the rulers send ambassadors to your court or pay much attention to you in general until after you free the dwarves.
“Ruby” is twofold—
In Stone and in Name—the RED Dwarf Mines (Stone), and one of the Dwarves you rescue is called RED Keldin (Name). (Obsessed? Me?) Alternatively, RED Dwarves for name.
Just for the sake of giving you useless information - corundum is actually aluminum oxide (alumina), which is colorless, and the color of rubies comes from trace metallic impurities (in the case of rubies, the impurity is chromium (Cr3+) ions). Electronic absorptive transitions between the individual chromium ion d-orbitals are responsible for the red color. Blue sapphires generally are caused by iron and titanium impurities; when both of these ions are present, there are charge-transfer states that give rise to the blue color. Other colors are due to other impurities. The more "impure" the gemstone, generally the deeper the color, although since some colors are due to more than one impurity, the relative concentrations can give rise to a lot of different colors. Quartz is similar except quartz is silicon oxide (silica). However, silicon and aluminum are slightly different sizes, and the crystal packing is therefore different. The result is that quartz is softer than corundum (actually this is the second hardest mineral known), which makes the latter better for jewelry. Also because silicon is so much more prevalent in the earth's crust, natural corundums (i.e., rubies and sapphires) are much more valuable than than their quartz counterparts, as you probably know if you've ever had to buy one for somebody.Kareeah Indaga wrote: The corundum’s conundrum—if you do enough research on gemstones for whatever reason, you’ll learn that rubies and sapphires are actually the same stone—they’re corundums. The ONLY difference between the two is color—rubies are red (and sometimes pink, depending on where you are), sapphires are everything else. Thus by “ruby” the riddle means “red”.
"What men are poets who can speak of Jupiter if he were like a man, but if he is an immense spinning sphere of methane and ammonia must be silent?" - Richard P. Feynman
- Mutare Drake
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Wow! Really? Okay, gimme a bit to make something up...Kareeah Indaga wrote:DING DING DING DING DING!!!
Ah, I thought the twofold was "ruby" as in red (the "stone" part), and then the "name" part was found by rearranging the letters in "ruby" to read "bury", meaning something buried or underground like the mine. Nice, nice riddle.“Ruby” is twofold—
In Stone and in Name—the RED Dwarf Mines (Stone), and one of the Dwarves you rescue is called RED Keldin (Name). (Obsessed? Me?) Alternatively, RED Dwarves for name.
Well, here goes...hope I've made this decently, we'll have to see...I probably won't get on tomorrow, but will be sure to Sunday, so see you all then!
A blue shape
Over blue
Within gray
Black all around
Under a cover of white.
Who am I?
MM7
- Kareeah Indaga
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Bah, you think corundums are expensive—try Alexandrite, of the chrysoberyls, originally found in Russia. Chromium is the main cause of its color, and it turns green in sunlight and red in incandescent light. Easily $1,000 a carat last I checked, and that was just for a plain stone.Corribus wrote:Also because silicon is so much more prevalent in the earth's crust, natural corundums (i.e., rubies and sapphires) are much more valuable than than their quartz counterparts, as you probably know if you've ever had to buy one for somebody.
Ummm…the genies in the Walls of Mist?Mutare Drake wrote: A blue shape
Over blue
Within gray
Black all around
Under a cover of white.
Who am I?
MM7
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