I see a small pattern that might have some significance... Look at the first letter of each of the codes, seems like the starting number/letter goes up from A to Z as the codes go along. Who knows, its probably nothing, but it looks cool.
I see a small pattern that might have some significance... Look at the first letter of each of the codes, seems like the starting number/letter goes up from A to Z as the codes go along. Who knows, its probably nothing, but it looks cool.
I don't always fight for whats right... i fight to be whats left.
Stress Test 1
Beta Mission 1
Stress Test 2
Beta Mission 2
Alpha
Beta Mission 3
... and counting
Come join the Desert Nomads a PS3 Defiance Clan.
http://desertnomads.enjin.com/
Need codes? Find them here: http://forums.defiance.com/showthrea...odes-*Updated*
I don't always fight for whats right... i fight to be whats left.
Stress Test 1
Beta Mission 1
Stress Test 2
Beta Mission 2
Alpha
Beta Mission 3
... and counting
Nothing is random ... nothing MAN made is even remotely random, especially given a set as limited as this. While 2.7 odd billion may seem like a large number, it is fairly small. The only limiting factor would be if they haven't registered all 120 codes; which actually supports a pattern even if it hasn't been revealed. They will have some serialized system in place of preselected strings instead of willy nilly selecting them and then pitting the against those already registered; probably on some excel sheet on some dude's computer. This pattern would only be visible to us if we were to run some kind of operation against the development team to extract the data, along with the person with access to the network; we would have to force them to input the strings. Another option would be to penetrate the network and input a series of whatever number of strings remain, of our own creation.
This is a joke. Don't run an operation against the Defiance development team and/or network.
"Within a few decades, machine intelligence will surpass human intelligence, leading to The Singularity -- technological change so rapid and profound it represents a rupture in the fabric of human history. The implications include the merger of biological and nonbiological intelligence, immortal software-based humans, and ultra-high levels of intelligence that expand outward in the universe at the speed of light."
- Ray Kurzweil