![]() Most of the files have 100 english words, but three of them have 101 words. Turns out the password is one of the anagrams given in the Canium text box. Upon downloading the files and trying to extract them in a program like WinRAR, a password box opens. Scanning the QR code gives a link to a website which lets you download a zip file: Plugging it in to a Base64 to Image converter gave us a QR code By decoding the text with the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) using a key assembled from steps 2 and 3 - XT6n64T7iR6H3YkSUkV6iI7 -, which resulted in a base 64 cipher. The words on this step are a jarbled mess. ![]() The ISBN of the book is 9781101628270, which gives back another pastebin link once discovered: When converted to English, it is discovered that the text is from Mark Twain's "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn." The text, however, was in multiple languages, such as Norwegian, English, German, and Hungarian. The text is from a book and the ISBN of the book must be found to advance. When converted to English letters, reads "ISBN," an international standard for categorizing books. Upon typing the letters in, the site gives a pastebin link: tries to spell the word "nuisance," he instead writes XWVUAFP, to which the computer replies "that is incorrect." People thought that the box would be looking for "Extraterrestial," but the box replies "that is incorrect." Turns out this is a quote from E.T. ![]() If you download it and run it in a program like Photoshop, you will see the word E.T crudely written on the side. ![]() This leads to a seemingly empty page with the Canium logo and the word "Alpha" on it. When read backwards and added to the end of the canium link, we get : Turns out the hidden message is the first letter of each line. It started with the following image:Ĭ, when followed, displays a text box which, when written into, gives back randomized text put in as an anagram. Canium was found on 4chan's /x/ board then posted on r/mysteries. ![]()
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