Icelandic Waters: *while browsing the RFCell* “I think I struck me some gold, Pa.”

Icelandic Water Dragon: “What a beautiful record of the Stick Pet Thread. A map complete with light fixtures, motion sensor nodes, and power-operated tunnels. And what was in the Room of Amazement? If my memory serves me well, I do believe it had something to do with . . . optics? Or perhaps magnetic machinery? Perhaps I can recycle this in some capacity…”
I must applaud you for being uniquely incomprehensible (at least to me) in almost every post you make
The RFCell (proper name: "RFCELL_CW”) is my nickname for the personal USB stick that has 113GB of archived data stored on it. Any other questions?
The diagram, I get that a lot of it is just references that I won’t get, but I’ve never seen one with that sort of structure
The diagram doesn't actually have as many references as you would expect. It's an originally made map of a cave, settled and turned into some sort of underground settlement or base. The green text usually labels private rooms for people. The yellow dots mark light fixtures, and the orange dots represent motion sensor nodes connected to a security system. The mint arrows trace the routes of pressure-controlled tunnels (akin to the ones used to move fish past dams; look it up) that provide expedited travel to important rooms. The room labeled “SCREW” is a giant motorized corkscrew used as a staircase between the levels.
This place was made by two dogs named Barkster and Muddy, the only two original characters in this thread. All the other characters named in the map are unoriginal, as the thread this map originates from was largely based on a book series by Tom Watson (
ISBN 978-0-06-211078-7).In case this also needs explanation . . . a thread is a cluster of development and ideas in a story setting; basically, a work-in-progress story. When left in my mind, they tend to remain in the form of a loose cluster of events held together by emotions, and pulling them out of my mind to type them out often takes additional effort and can lead to some on-the-fly reconsideration and improvisation. I often fantasize about telling their stories through many mediums, but writing them is the easiest way to go about it.
That was a very exhaustive report . . . any more questions?
wow I actually understand now, I thought it was some really weird concept chart lol
And I definitely get the whole thread thing #relatable
😉