Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Ginter Code Solution Part 3

What About the Other 91?




Nick: Once I had found the 9 L cards I started looking for other boxes around letters or any other oddity but could find nothing. I was stumped where to go from here. I was also trying to match the symbols up with letters and numbers. We counted 57 different symbols so I guessed that maybe each letter had two symbols, but I would have figured that whatever symbols would have been the vowels would have popped up very frequent, but none seem to pop up a lot more than any other. I had no idea where to go next until...



Mike: I wanted to convince myself that we did not need all the 100 cards to solve the puzzle, and that the other 91 cards were just smoke-screens, but unfortunately after almost hitting to wall with what to do next I came up with an idea. I took one of the L cards, Aaron Hill and noted that he had 4 letters in his last name and began going through my scans more other 4 letter name cards, and stumbled upon this...










Mike: Notice a couple of things here. Most importantly, the top border matches completely! Planet, moon, cup, key...all in order, but just the top border. Also notice that both backgrounds are green. I immediately called Nick up to report my finding. Nick followed suit, looking for other matches with players with the same number of letters in their names. next came...







Eaton and Loney...both with blue backgrounds, same number of letters in the last name, but wait, this time only the right side matched. Hmmm...




Then...






Again, same amount of letters in the name, same blue background, except this time the LEFT border only matches!






Mike: We knew at this point we were on to something. Right around this time I had some family over for dinner but was just freaking out because we were hot on the trail. I kept disappearing into the bedroom to check me email, and sure enough, Nick was sending them fast and furious and before we knew it we had 9 matches as follows...




Hill/Cain, 4 letter name, green background, top border




Eaton/Loney 5 letter name, blue background, right border




Wells/Bruce 5 letter name, red background, left border




Uggla/Parra 5 letter name, red background, right border




Liriano/Theriot 7 letter name, green background, right border




Miller/Smoltz 6 letter name, green background, left border




Reynolds/Hochovar 7 letter name, blue background, top border




Ankiel/Posada 6 letter name, blue background, left border




Kinsler/Grienke 6 letter name, red background, top border




Important Notes:







  • There are 3 top, 3 right, and 3 left borders




  • There are 3 red pairs, 3 blue pairs, and 3 green pairs




  • MOST IMPORTANT...the matching cards turn out to be cards # 1-9 on the base checklist! Don't believe me? Take a look!



So at this point we have now dealt with 18 cards...

Nick: I was starting to lose my hope when I ran into a dead-end on the L cards, but when Mike told me about matching the top border on one of the cards, my mind started racing. Mike had family over so I found the rest of the matches, and when I realized that the cards were 1-9 on the checklist, I also found that interesting. The reason is, if you look at the checklist most of the code cards are spread out, and only a few are in sequential order. Here, the first 9 cards of the set were in sequential order and matched a given border to the L cards. At this point we still didn't have the Wells card, so we had to do some guessing as to which L was really boxed.



Mike: With family on its way home I jumped back on the computer and started arranging the 18 cards in order of 1-9 with its match, so #1 Bruce/Wells, #2 Grienke/Kinsler...and ran into another coder red herring. Taking the letter from each card corresponding to the letter on the primer "L" cards, I spelled out the words UNRAVEL IT. I was so certain that I had just solved the code and quickly sent my guess to Topps and contacted Nick. He was pretty skeptical that was all there was too it, and thank god he decided to dig deeper, because I was WRONG!



Nick: Haha, I remember getting this statement in an email: "I figured it out and submitted the guess." That was the only thing the email said. I'm sitting here thinking, how in the hell did this guy figure that out? He didn't tell me what it was or anything, so I thought it might be the last I would hear from him. I emailed him back asking what it was, he told me about UNRAVEL IT, and said "congrats bud, we did it". We borrowed Unravel for the title of this blog, and I believe Topps did put this in their purposefully to make people think they had solved it. We would later find out that those 9 cards that spelled UNRAVEL IT were not used again in the code. Anyways, at this point I was convinced there was no way we weren't going to use all 100 cards, so I wasn't going to give up just yet by believing that was the final solution.




2 comments:

  1. This is truly impressive, the Pat Neshek cards are cool, the whole solution is mind-boggling, you guys are insanely high energy fabulous, and thanks for posting this blog.

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  2. I think doing the blog is therapuetic, kinda puts the final nail in the roller coaster ride. Well, hearing from Topps would be the final final nail. Thanks for the good wishes!

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