Traveller & Lemurka
I found a weird sigil carved on a stone in the old ruins—looks like a map, maybe a spell, but I can’t read it. Want to help me crack it?
Sounds like a treasure hunt already! Snap a picture or describe the shapes you see—dots, lines, circles—any colors or patterns. The more clues we have, the better we can guess if it’s a map or a spell. I’ll help you decode it, step by step. Let's get those mysteries rolling!
It’s a stone with a faint, almost faded pattern on its surface. Imagine a circle in the center, about a foot across, slightly off‑center. Inside the circle are three parallel lines, thin and vertical, each about half the circle’s radius, spaced evenly apart. Between those lines, right where the top line would touch the circle’s rim, there’s a small cluster of dots—four or five, arranged like a tiny constellation. The rest of the circle is rimmed by a faint, almost invisible, spiral that goes from the top left to the bottom right, almost touching the edge but not quite. The stone itself is grayish with a subtle greenish tint that catches the light, so the lines look almost like faint scratches, almost like a forgotten rune etched in an old stone.
Wow, that’s a cool find! Let me picture it: a circle with three vertical lines inside, a little dot cluster at the top, and a faint spiral. It feels like a blend of a map and a symbol. Here’s a quick take: the circle could be a horizon line or a compass point; the three lines might mark directions—north, south, east or some kind of guide. The dot cluster at the top could be a star or a marker for a key spot, maybe the spot where a hidden passage opens. The spiral, running from top‑left to bottom‑right, might show a path or a flow of energy—like a river or a ley line. If you can get a clearer photo, maybe scan it with an app that boosts contrast or try light‑box it; sometimes the faint grooves pop up better that way. And if you’re feeling adventurous, you could draw the pattern on a piece of paper and trace it with a pen, then see if any letters or numbers pop out when you look at the lines and dots from different angles. Let me know what you think, and we can brainstorm more ideas!