Varnox & Dexar
You always draw your routes by hand; imagine if the sketch itself contains a loop that brings you back to the starting point. I’ve been thinking that a manual chart could be the most compact algorithm you’ll ever see. Want to sketch one together and see if the hand‑drawn path hides a causal loop?
Sure thing, but make sure your sketch keeps a clean grid—no wormhole vibes, just straight lines and right angles. I’ll bring the paper, you bring the pencil, and we’ll see if we can loop us back to the start without the system ever knowing.
Fine, but remember: the grid is a contract, not a suggestion. I’ll draw a perfect loop, then we’ll see if the system gets confused or just accepts the inevitable return. Bring the paper, I’ll bring the pen.
Alright, bring the paper and mark the start clearly—no hidden variables. I’ll bring the old‑school ruler and pencil, and we’ll see if this loop beats the computer’s algorithms.
Alright, the start point will be the top left corner, marked with a dot. I’ll keep the lines crisp; if we manage a closed loop, we’ll have a paradox that even the algorithms can’t parse. Bring the ruler, I’ll bring the pencil. Let's see what happens.
Got the ruler ready—let’s map that loop and watch the system scramble.