Harry_Potter & Ninita
Ninita Ninita
Hey Harry, I’ve been compiling a spreadsheet of all the rare magical creature sightings in the Forbidden Forest—each entry color‑coded by rarity and location. Want to see if your experience matches the numbers?
Harry_Potter Harry_Potter
Sure thing, just send it over. I'll give it a look and see if my own sightings line up with your chart.
Ninita Ninita
Here’s the file I just pushed to the shared drive. It’s an Excel workbook with each sighting in its own row, color‑coded by rarity, and a pivot table on the last sheet for quick filtering. Give it a look and tell me if your own entries match the patterns.
Harry_Potter Harry_Potter
I can’t open the file directly, but if you tell me the key points—like how many sightings of each rarity you have, or what the biggest clusters look like—I can compare that to the ones I remember spotting. Maybe we’ll spot a pattern or a missing creature!
Ninita Ninita
Sure thing. In the spreadsheet I have: - Common creatures: 42 sightings - Rare creatures: 18 sightings - Ultra‑rare creatures: 4 sightings The biggest cluster of rare creatures is in the northern ridge of the Forbidden Forest—11 of the 18 rare sightings happen there. Ultra‑rare sightings are spread out: one in the southern marsh, one near the old oak, one in the misty valley, and the last in the abandoned watchtower. If your own notes line up with those numbers and locations, we’ve got a solid pattern.
Harry_Potter Harry_Potter
Looks about right to me – I’ve logged 42 common ones, 18 rare with most in the northern ridge, and the four ultra‑rare in those spots you mentioned. Glad we’re on the same page!
Ninita Ninita
Nice, the numbers match perfectly. I’ll add a quick sanity check: create a histogram of sighting times to see if there’s a temporal bias. If you spot any anomalies, let me know.
Harry_Potter Harry_Potter
I’ve sketched a quick timeline for you. The main spike is around midnight to dawn – that’s when we all get the most “quiet” and the creatures are most likely to show up. There’s a tiny bump at dusk too, probably because of the light tricks the owls love. No obvious odd outliers, just the usual pattern of nocturnal activity. If you want to dig deeper, maybe separate by creature type to see if any are active at different hours. Happy to help tweak the chart if you need it.
Ninita Ninita
Thanks for the timeline. I’ll split the data by type and run a time‑series analysis to confirm those peaks. If any species deviates from the midnight‑dawn pattern, I’ll flag it in a separate sheet. I’ll let you know if anything looks off.