Everything I’ve done for Furcadia is below.
This is actually the original concept—on one side is a listing of all the filters (which can be displayed by clicking on their tabs) and on the right is a listing of all the lines. Selecting or deselecting a filters will change what lines are displayed in that list.
On the plus side, you get instant results. On the downside, this page requires JavaScript to work.
This works sort of like a traditional search engine, except you select from a list of predefined search terms instead of typing them in.
Unlike the Cross-Referenced Catalogue of DragonSpeak Lines, this requires no JavaScript to work (though it does have some to make the page more convenient to use), but it will only display the results on a new page.
A simple listing of all lines
As many teleportation places as you want in only seven DragonSpeak lines.
How to save on DragonSpeak when you have a lot of signs.
The Knight’s Tour is a classic chess puzzle. In chess, the knight can move two spaces horizontally and one vertically, or one horizontally, and two vertically. In The Knight’s Tour, you have to visit each square of a chessboard exactly once.
In this dream, I have no fewer than 13 boards of different sizes from the 1×1 board (which is in the dream as a joke) and the 3×4 board (the smallest that can be actually toured) to the 15×15 board, and even the odd-shaped Tamerlane Chess Board, and my dream webpage has solutions for all of them (except the 1×1 board, which doesn’t need a walkthrough).
I really enjoyed creating this dream, in which someone had to complete all puzzles. Originally, I intended to create sort of a scoreboard where people could post their scores, but I never did figure out how to pull off a link that would automatically add a score to the site. The idea was that the fewer hints you used, the higher your score and if you used no hints, you got a fireworks display. If I ever recode that dream, I’d remove the hints system.
If you include Puzzle Palace Mark II—the version that was on Furcadia from March 2010 until 2019—this dream is over a decade old, even though this iteration (Puzzle Palace Mark VI) only dates from 2019. The puzzles here can be done in any order; this is just a dream made for fun.
The walkthrough is so large that it was broken down into several sections. The Chess Hunt even got a walkthrough all its own.
If you include Puzzle Palace Mark II—the version that was on Furcadia from March 2010 until 2019—this dream is over a decade old, even though this iteration (Puzzle Palace Mark VI) only dates from 2019. The puzzles here can be done in any order; this is just a dream made for fun.
The walkthrough is so large that it was broken down into several sections. The Chess Hunt even got a walkthrough all its own.