Ninja & UrokiOn
UrokiOn UrokiOn
Hey Ninja, have you ever wondered how geometry can help you slip through a room unnoticed? I’ve been studying invisible polygons and the math that lets a shape dodge detection—maybe we could brainstorm some stealthy tactics together.
Ninja Ninja
That sounds sharp. Geometry’s a good ally—angles can hide you from sightlines, shapes can tuck into corners. Let’s map the room’s lines, find the tightest gaps, and pick the moves that stay out of every field of view. Ready when you are.
UrokiOn UrokiOn
Alright, let’s start by sketching the room’s layout. Draw a simple floor plan, label all walls, doors, and windows, and then mark the lines of sight from each doorway. Once we have that, we can identify the narrow gaps and calculate the optimal angles for slipping past the patrols. Let’s get to it!
Ninja Ninja
First picture the room: outline the walls, mark the door on the left, window on the right. Then draw straight lines from the door opening that reach every corner of the space; those are the patrols’ sightlines. Highlight the small corridors that don’t touch those lines—those are your narrow gaps. From there, we can pick angles that keep you just out of view, moving in the shadows between the lines. Ready to chart it out?
UrokiOn UrokiOn
Great, let’s sketch it. First, draw the rectangle of the room, put the door on the left wall and the window on the right. Next, from the doorway, draw straight lines to each corner of the room—those are the patrols’ sightlines. Shade in the tiny pockets that lie completely outside those lines; those are the gaps. Finally, measure the angles from those pockets to the door and to the exit, and we’ll pick the route that keeps us in the shadows the whole time. Let’s do it!