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Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Balance
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Balance Soren Fitz

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The Nobles kill Isis, while First absorbs all of them, realized the power is too great, and gives it all to Isis, and goes into hiding. Evil Me takes the completed Almega and wages war against Existence, may or may not kill Artemis, depending on how you all handle it, and Time Line performs an Absolute Merge with Data to permanently bind them together in hopes of destroying the Almega.


That sounds crazy enough to be true, if I didn't already know that you would never give hints on your plots, especially one that would so obviously be so confusing.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Etcetera
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Etcetera Grace

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<Snipped quote by Etcetera>

That sounds crazy enough to be true, if I didn't already know that you would never give hints on your plots, especially one that would so obviously be so confusing.


I miswrote that. I meant gives it all to Prism*
Isis is dead.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Balance
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Balance Soren Fitz

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<Snipped quote by Balance>

I miswrote that. I meant gives it all to Prism*
Isis is dead.


No she isn't?
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Etcetera
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<Snipped quote by Etcetera>

No she isn't?


Reread the first clause.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Balance
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Balance Soren Fitz

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<Snipped quote by Balance>

Reread the first clause.


Ah, right. Okay then.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Etcetera
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Etcetera Grace

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Ah, right. Okay then.


I do enjoy giving real spoilers that sound so fake that nobody believes them. But anyway, that was fun to write.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by whizzball1
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First, I still don't get it. Second,



When you divide by seven unevenly, the repeating decimal is always some combination of 1, 4, 2, 8, 5, and 7, in the exact same order, just beginning from a different section. It's really cool and I don't know if any other prime number does that.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by whizzball1
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gasp
13 does the same thing, twice

(11 apparently repeats in multiples of 9, which is weird.)
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Etcetera
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Etcetera Grace

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<Snipped quote by Etcetera>

When you divide by seven unevenly, the repeating decimal is always some combination of 1, 4, 2, 8, 5, and 7, in the exact same order, just beginning from a different section. It's really cool and I don't know if any other prime number does that.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6gwnh-JuZvo
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by whizzball1
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OH MY GOSH
THE DIGITS OF THE REPEATING DECIMALS OF 7 AND 13 EACH ADD UP TO 27
IT'S SO COOL
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Webmaster
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OH MY GOSH
THE DIGITS OF THE REPEATING DECIMALS OF 7 AND 13 EACH ADD UP TO 27
IT'S SO COOL


That's how math works. There's probably a theorem on why.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by whizzball1
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<Snipped quote by whizzball1>

That's how math works. There's probably a theorem on why.


Probably. By the way, I just realised that the number of possible uneven divisions of 7 is six and the number for 13 is 12. I wonder what happens with 19...
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<Snipped quote by Webmaster>

Probably. By the way, I just realised that the number of possible uneven divisions of 7 is six and the number for 13 is 12. I wonder what happens with 19...


You're subtracting one each time.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Balance
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Balance Soren Fitz

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<Snipped quote by whizzball1>

You're subtracting one each time.


?
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Webmaster
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<Snipped quote by Webmaster>

?


7-6
13-12
19-18
25-24
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by souleaterfan320
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souleaterfan320 Shinji (Endgame Form)

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Bleh.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Balance
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Balance Soren Fitz

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<Snipped quote by Balance>

7-6
13-12
19-18
25-24


Right. Although 25 doesn't produce the effect. Hmm...
7-6
13-12
19-18
25-24
31-30
37-36
43-42
49-48
Squares...
55-54
Never mind.
61-60
67-66
73-72
79-78
85-84
I wonder if there's a pattern. TIME TO FIND OUT. (after I finish figuring out if all of the cycles of x/7 have a similar prime factorisation)
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Balance
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Balance Soren Fitz

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Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Webmaster
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Webmaster Katherine

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<Snipped quote by Webmaster>

Right. Although 25 doesn't produce the effect. Hmm...
7-6
13-12
19-18
25-24
31-30
37-36
43-42
49-48
Squares...
55-54
Never mind.
61-60
67-66
73-72
79-78
85-84
I wonder if there's a pattern. TIME TO FIND OUT. (after I finish figuring out if all of the cycles of x/7 have a similar prime factorisation)


The pattern is that 25 isn't prime.
Hidden 9 yrs ago Post by Balance
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Balance Soren Fitz

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<Snipped quote by Webmaster>

Right. Although 25 doesn't produce the effect. Hmm...
7-6
13-12
19-18
25-24
31-30
37-36
43-42
49-48
Squares...
55-54
Never mind.
61-60
67-66
73-72
79-78
85-84
I wonder if there's a pattern. TIME TO FIND OUT. (after I finish figuring out if all of the cycles of x/7 have a similar prime factorisation)


OH DUH OF COURSE THEY HAVE A SIMILAR PRIME FACTORISATIOn
They're all divisible by 142857.
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