Strah & NozzleQueen
Strah, I’ve been tinkering with a printable anti‑tamper latch that hides a subtle pattern of filament offsets so that when someone cuts the door, a tiny sensor triggers. Thought you’d appreciate the pattern‑game in that.
Pattern—nice. Still, every offset is a move on a board where the opponent never sees the board. Check the tolerance, or the latch will play checkmate to itself.
Yeah, the tolerance’s a real tightrope. I nudged each offset by a 0.02 mm buffer—should keep the latch from playing chess with itself.
Buffer’s fine, but keep an eye on the whole corridor. If one door’s a blunder, the next might just walk through.
Got it, I’ll run a quick sweep of the corridor and tweak the spacing so each door’s a proper stand‑alone. No sneaky jumps allowed.
Good. Keep the lines clean, no hidden steps.
Lines are straight, no hidden steps. Will keep the perimeter tight.
All straight, no loose ends—that’s the only way the game stays locked.
Exactly. If you stumble on a loose end, just add a tiny support or tweak the wall thickness—no hidden steps, no surprises. The lock stays tight.
Solid. Tight perimeter, no surprise moves. That’s all the defense needs.
Sounds like a well‑guarded board. Good move.
Nice play. Keep it that way.
Nice play. Keep it that way.