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Burn the rope
Burn the rope











burn the rope
  1. #BURN THE ROPE HOW TO#
  2. #BURN THE ROPE FREE#

To think of it another way, there are always four ends from which the rope is burning, meaning that the rope will burn at 4x the rate it would if only burned from one end, and therefore will be burned in 1/4 the time. The limit of this process, as the number of iterations approaches infinity, is fifteen minutes. When this happens, light the remaining rope somewhere in the middle. Unless you're very lucky, one rope will burn out faster than the other.

burn the rope

The flame in the middle will split the rope into two ropes, each of which is burning from both ends. Light the rope at each end, and light the rope somewhere in the middle. Folding it in half is doing exactly this, and so doesn't work as an answer. They make a big deal out of the fact that the rope is of non-uniform thickness, and therefore you can't just divide the rope by length and have that translate to time. The solution presented in the book, as written, is wrong, at least in English (I can't speak for the original phrasing of the problem). This might be a dead thread, but it's one of the first hits on google, so maybe someone else will see this. Keep in mind that in theory you might need to ignite the remaining part infinite number of times (and also infinitely fast in the end, which would create a nice link with question 1) in case no 2 parts finish burning at the same time. The canonical solution to the problem is to start burning the rope from both ends and anywhere in the middle at the same time and then repeatedly ignite the remaining part after the other one has been burnt, anywhere in the middle, until the whole rope is burnt. On the other hand if they mean that the both halves should touch and the faster burning part will ignite the slower burning parts, this does not work either because the faster burning part would ignite the slower part in multiple places, leading to faster-than-15 minutes burning of the entire rope. If by folding they mean to combine them and create a new, shorter rope from these 2, then we cannot be sure what the burning time is for such a constructed rope.

burn the rope

Depending on how quickly the player beats the game, the song can actually be longer than the total playtime.I had the same issue with the solution from the book. The player then has to ascend one of the chambers, grab a torch, and burn the rope to drop a chandelier on the boss and win the game.Īfter the game, the player is treated to a " Still Alive"-esque song about what has happened in the game and how short it was.

burn the rope

There are two chambers, on on either side, filled with torches.

#BURN THE ROPE FREE#

Players are free to shoot him as much as they like but the boss regenerates health at an alarming rate: thus the players need to remember the games title. Also, you can't really die")Īt the end of the tunnel is a large, black square called the Grinning Colossus. (right-clicking any time during the game reveals a fourth instruction: "4.

  • To kill him you have to burn the rope above.
  • There's a boss at the end of this tunnel.
  • #BURN THE ROPE HOW TO#

    The player takes the protagonist through a bit of platforming, at which there are extremely pointed instructions on how to defeat the boss: He is able to fling axes in an arc ala Castlevania. The hero of You Have to Burn the Rope is a nameless sphere, similar in appearance to a poorly drawn Kirby with a bowler hat.













    Burn the rope