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>Hey dude pick the black one!

>Why should I pick that one??

>'Cause I said so trust me!

>okay...

 

It's like having a drunk backseat driver where he goes

"Dude take a left here!"

"That's a tree..."

"Trust me"

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It sure makes my everyday life far more interesting if you ask me.

I must have ended up on the wrong planet. Everything here is so strange.

Guest Anonymous

There are two doors in a room, each which look exactly the same. However, one leads to an evil old man who will lock the tulpa out of the creator's memories, and the other leads to a nice old man that will open up the creator's memories to the tulpa. Once the tulpa opens a door, it must go through it and see the old man. There is also no way to see what is inside the door without going in.

In front of each door is a guard, each which looks exactly the same. However, one guard always tells the truth to the tulpa, and the other guard always tells a lie to the tulpa. The guard which always lies is not necessarily in front of the door that leads to the evil old man, and vice-versa. In other words, each guard may be in front of either of the two doors.

 

You lesser mortals amuse me. I would simply have my tulpa ask "Have you ever been so far even as decided to use go want to look more like?" If they answer yes, then I simply enter the opposite door to the one they are guarding. The answer is rather simple.

Am I wasting my time trying to solve this riddle or is there an answer?

Nevermind, I worked it out.

 

You can't ask what's behind a door, as you will get the same answer from the both guards. You can't ask them about what you already know, because you don't know which guard is guarding which door.

 

So you need to find out which guard is which, and which door is which. So you ask a guard about his door. But since you don't know which guard lies and which tells the truth, you ask a guard about the other guard, and his door.

 

"What would the other guard say about where his door leads?"

 

The truthful guard (in front of the good door) will say "He will say it leads to the good old man"

The lying guard (in front of the good door) will say "He will say it leads to the good old man"

The truthful guard (in front of the bad door) will say "He will say it leads to the bad old man"

The lying guard (in front of the bad door) will say "He will say it leads to the bad old man"

 

In all cases, what the guards say is the opposite of the truth.

So if you walked up to a guard and asked him "What would the other guard say about where his door leads?" and he responded with "He will say it leads to the bad old man", you know that this door is the bad door, and vice versa.

frt

Am I wasting my time trying to solve this riddle or is there an answer?

 

There is an answer, but I'm not the type of person to ever tell you if you give up and ask for the answer. You either get it right, or you never know the answer. Kukuku.

Yeah I got it right.

 

 

 

Kukuku.

 

I well thought out question. Here is the answer you will receive from either guard:

 

"What guard?"

here is the answer

 

ask the guard to take your tulpa into the door that is most like the guard. (inform them you think truthfulness is good, lying is bad.)

lying guard will go to truthful man.

truthful guard will go to truthful man.

BOOM were done here bitches!

For Science!

 

Let me try

 

I'd go up to the second guard and ask "Why hasn't this been towed? It's obviously broken down" and then go up the door next to him and say "It's locked, but I can get through with the right key" and wallglitch through it using a gun. My tulpa couldn't come along because she got stuck in a wall and is now perpetually walking backwards trying to pathfind out of it.

This hot empty painting should be locked and towed.

here is the answer

 

ask the guard to take your tulpa into the door that is most like the guard. (inform them you think truthfulness is good, lying is bad.)

lying guard will go to truthful man.

truthful guard will go to truthful man.

BOOM were done here bitches!

 

You're setting up a hypothetical statement before the question; truthfulness isn't really always good and lying isn't really always bad. The statement "Truth is good and lies are bad" would have had to been objective for this to work.

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