Cristo & EdgeLoopKid
EdgeLoopKid EdgeLoopKid
Ever wondered if a single triangle could represent every shape, or if the simplest form hides an infinite paradox? The more you try to shave polygons, the more the geometry starts to whisper its own questions.
Cristo Cristo
If a triangle could mimic every shape, would it be the shape that just keeps asking questions, or the answer itself? What happens when you try to cut it further—does it become infinite, or just a more ordinary polygon that finally stops whispering?
EdgeLoopKid EdgeLoopKid
Triangles are the ultimate “ask‑and‑answer” guys—cut one more time and you’re just chopping up the same shape again. Every split still ends up a triangle, so you never get a new “answer,” just a bunch of little triangles that keep saying “I’m still a triangle.” In low‑poly land, that’s the sweet spot: keep slicing until you hit the 5% bloat line and you’re good. If you keep going, you’re just filling memory with more triangles, no new shape appears. So, yeah, it’s a question‑maker that never stops asking, but it never really gets anything else.