Depending which way the explosions kick you, it IS possible to catch 10 explosions, some set off by you, some by your friends. May my best advice lie as a blessing of luck! )Ĭomment by Stryper7I am very surprised that nobody has mentioned how you can get others to help you work towards this acheivement in one of two ways.ġ.) Get some people together and jump on a heavily mined spot, you all should jump for a location 2-3 yds. (If one is placed at a mine's 2 o'clock, one will be launched to the mine's 2 o'clock ) obvious reasons)Ĭ) The direction one is launched is dependent on their position juxtaposed to the mine. (Thus forcing us to watch with our fingers crossed and no intervention)ī) Using one's mount to jump on an initial cluster counts for all which explode. In conclusion what I found out that is fact beyond a reasonable doubt is:Ī) Movement after initial airlift explosion expels from qualification. Of course it would so happen that I finally get it and I nearly triple the requirement. After about 2 minutes of logging back in after the restart I gave it a few last desperate attempts, and to my glee I got a nice couple, few, several, 10!.15.20.27.dead. I wasn't able to make my timer for the restarts, so I decided I'd try to lag myself out via youtube, but I still couldn't get enough ping. It wasn't going well and frustration set in, so I looked up all the techniques to try them. I am not sure if this counts for Paladin Bubbles.Ĭomment by 257891I was in Storm Peaks just before rolling restarts, so I decided to try this achievement before my time was up. and still get credit for having a mine blow up on you - even if you absorb all damage. You CAN use shields - Mana Shield, Power Word: Shield, Fire ward, Ice Barrier etc.Use it if you're getting blown out of the field. Mages can blink and for me it seemed you could pretend you were on the ground and blink like normal, which will put you ~20 yards ahead.Try and make them blow you toward the middle of the mine field. (If you run to a mine from the south of it, the explosion will send you flying south). Running into a mine will blow you in the direction you ran at it from.Personally confirmed that you have 4 seconds from taking damage from a mine to hit another one. If you're in the air for 5 (slowfall) then it will reset. So if you land in 2 seconds, you'll have 2 seconds to be blown up again. Soon the software will be available for download and you will be able to play it anywhere.You have 4 seconds from when the mine blows up to be blown up by another mine. Through the metaphor of the minefield, it suggests observations on invisible or imponderable layers of our daily routes.Ĭurrently, the game has matches within predetermined sites, such as Parque Trianon, where the exhibition takes place as part of the Rumos exhibition at Itaú Cultural in São Paulo until September. The artist explains the project: In times of collective excitement by the use of online mapping systems and purchase of GPS devices presented in many different forms (vehicle tracking, dogs and even golf balls), Minesweeper is not intended to indicate the right path, but to suggest an array of possible errors, uncertainties, exploration and experimentation of the traveled territory. Unlike the Windows version, there are no cheat codes. You could save yourself by bargaining for one more minute, it you correctly answer questions about the physical space you're in. You have to make decisions about the directions to be followed and deciding on the wrong trajectory or running out of time means GAME OVER for you. It works like this: guided by a virtual map, the player attempts to navigate an area between two points in a given amount of time without stepping on hidden virtual mines. In this context, the Brazilian artist Claudio Bueno created a game-performance version of Minesweeper, to be played on smartphones in public places. Mobile devices have revolutionized the way we interact with computers and location-based, geotagging software has made everything mappable and hackable. But much has changed since the game’s creation in 1989. The concept originated Robert Donner's famous Minesweeper game, originally for Windows PC it was responsible for detonating our pre-internet afternoons and smashing productivity to smithereens. We all know how a minefield works-it’s that lethal territorial domination tactic that kills and cripples.
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