If Guard 2 didn’t mean it when he said sorry that counts as a lie right?
If Guard 2 is the one that lies, that means they can’t have apologized
Liars say they’re sorry way more than people who tell the truth, I’ve found.
I think that’s a symtom of abuse, or indicator. Don’t quote me on this
Yup. That describes my ex for sure.
Abuse also creates people who at the core lack a sense of self, so trying to fit into groups can be difficult and makes them prone to do things wrong. (my head just went into a translation error dead zone)
It’s crazy how big of an impact a non-abusive upbringing can have. I’ve personally struggled with cognitive dissonance from my own, took me a low 15 years to accept it
Yeah. I had a physically and mentally abusive father as well, but he wasn’t much of a liar in this case. I’m 40, been on my own since 17, and still need regular therapy for all of it. So I empathize.
This would be a pretty amusing encounter I think.
Mage: “Uggghh… well I translated the inscription on the door. We have to resolve their quarrel to dispell the magic lock.”
Bard: “So hey fellas, my party and I saw you from across the dungeon…”
I like the referenced riddle because you can’t “fully” solve it, in the sense that you know all the information. You can figure out which path to take (which solves the riddle) but you cannot simultaneously know who lies and who tells the truth, which gives the riddle a bit of an unresolved feel. (I’m assuming it’s one yes-no question only.)
“you ever fuck this guy’s wife?”
Iiiii forgiiiive you!
Ask either do you have a nose, the one that always tells the truth has to say yes, the one that always lies has to say no.
That’s where the clause about having just one question comes into play.
Ok, so you used your one question finding that out, now how do you find out which door is safe now that you’re out of questions?
What doors? Post doesn’t mention any doors.
The riddle being referenced is an incredibly well known classic riddle. The full riddle is normally left out when jokes are being made about it for brevity, but the actual riddle does not work without the doors.