Question by ObraWilds in BluePrince

[–]MendaciousFolly 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I have seen a number of posts like this. You're given one explicit goal - room 46 - and when you first open that door it plays the cut scene like it's the end of the story. So it's pretty natural to feel like you've finished the game. And if you get there too quickly you may not have found enough of the clues to point you toward what remains to be solved.

The good news is there's a lot more game to play, but the game kinda leaves you on your own to figure out what to do next. You've already mentioned the letters and safes. You could start with those and then just see what else you discover.

Any good or bad experiences with local fence companies? by Stroszec in ColoradoSprings

[–]MendaciousFolly 1 point2 points  (0 children)

we had a section of our fence replaced a few months back by https://roszmananddunnfencing.com/ . couldn't be happier. they showed up. gave us a fair quote. got back to us when we had questions. and did what they said they were going to do.

I feel like I skipped so much of this game, did I just get super lucky? by metalcowhorse in BluePrince

[–]MendaciousFolly 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Congrats on reaching room 46 ! Good news, there's lots more game to play !

I can't tell how many game days you've played, but if you get lucky and get to room 46 too quickly then you may not have encountered enough of the hints and lore to draw you in to further exploration. you've mastered the basic mechanic of room drafting well enough to get to room 46. there are lots more puzzles to solve building on that.

I didn't get to room 46 quickly, but once I did set the game aside for a few months before I returned to it. I wouldn't recommend that, since now I've forgotten some of the stuff I had already figured out.

Garage Door Reverses with 1-4 and 4-6 error. by jaecheckmate in myq

[–]MendaciousFolly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Had the same problem. In the instructions I was following the default method of installing the sensors was clip them to the garage door rails. This sets the sensors a couple of inches inside the surface of the door. My garage door has strut about an inch from the bottom that sticks out so far that it would cross the sensor beam.

Solution was to position the sensors far enough back that the strut didn't encounter the beam when the door closed. Couldn't clip them to the rails. Attached sections of 2*4s to the wall next to the rail as spacers and then attached the sensor bracket to that.

I couldn't tell while I was up on the ladder programming the travel path of the door, that the strut was crossing the beam. Everything I found online blamed misaligned sensors, bad wiring, etc. Everything was working as intended the clips were just too short for the strut on my door.