Metropolitan Odyssey: F.D.R. I-1933
Saturday, June 11, 2011
9:00 AMish - 5:00 PMish, afterparty later that evening
Official Rules
Boundaries:
Roosevelt Island: All of the island open to the public, including bridges connecting to it. And stuff in the water, perhaps.
Manhattan Island: Along the F line, but on street level - 5th to 7th
Aves, from 19th to 23rd Streets and Broadway to 7th Ave, from 23rd to
33rd Streets.
For the purposes of the hunt, avenues run north-south, and streets run
east-west. Both sides of streets and avenues are considered to be in
play.
Cameras:
TEAMS MUST PROVIDE THEIR OWN CAMERAS. This means you can use digital cameras. But all photos
must be turned in as printed photos - not as disks or jump drives or
anything like that. Polaroids are also fine - if you can still find any
film. Make sure they're big enough for us to see what's going on -
those little sticker ones don't work so well for this. We reserve the
right to use photos from Metro Metro events in our promotional
materials.
Team Costumes:
We recommend you devise some sort of costume, uniform, or emblem. Not
only will it help your score and possibly garner you a prize at the
end, it will aid us in identifying you at the all-important midday
rendezvous. Here's what some past teams have done. Costume Examples
The Tasks:
Each task is assigned a certain number of points based on its
difficulty or our whimsy. In general, it is up to the team to decide
which tasks they want to try and complete within the allotted time.
There will be a list of COMPULSORY tasks that MUST be completed by each team. You see, that's what
"compulsory" means. These tasks will be clearly identified on the list
and CANNOT be skipped. Any team that does not complete the COMPULSORY tasks will be penalized.
Teams may split up to cover more territory if they
desire, but you just might find we've been diabolical in making it
detrimental to separate. We want people to stick together as much as
possible. Sure, you're competitive and want to win, but we want people
to have fun and discover things together.
All tasks have been designed such to be both SAFE and LEGAL,
as far as we could figure. If you feel as though you or a teammate is
engaging in unsafe or illegal activity, STOP! You are off-track and
this activity is not helping your cause. It's probably not helping
ours, either. We cannot be held responsible for participants' behavior.
Unless you behavior turns out to be award winning, in which case we
claim full credit. But only if it's a good award. Not a Razzie, a
Darwin, or a Golden Globe.
Turning It All In:
All materials must be turned in at 4:00 PM Saturday, June 11, 2011.
Late materials will result in the team being penalized. The materials
have to be turned in all together, all in one envelope. We will only
accept ONE completed task list, so if you've made copies make sure you
transfer all the answers to ONE list. No materials will be accepted
after 4:30 PM. And once you have turned in your answer packet, NOTHING
MORE may be added. Whining will not be tolerated.
Judging:
Bo, Brady, Will, Also Ed, And Tim, and their appointed minions will be
responsible for judging you. We mean, judging each team's material set.
The team that accumulates the most points wins, as that seems to make
the most sense. In the event that there is a tie, the winning team will
be the team that turns in their material set earlier. There is no official bribing structure in place. The judges' ruling is final. Whining will not be tolerated.
Afterparty:
Details on the day of the hunt. Only people who did the hunt can come
to the afterparty. No spouses, friends, out-of-town guests, etc.
Electronics:
Use of the Interwebs, smart phones, blenders, electric tie racks, etc.
is up to the teams. However, be forewarned that we gear this hunt to be
done on foot, so what information you discover without observing it
firsthand yourself may be erroneous. For instance, a web search might
give you a different answer to a clue than you would get if you went
there in person. If you are simply using web tubes to solve the clues,
then you have signed up for the wrong hunt. You want to sign up for
this hunt instead: dumbhunt.com.
Whining will not be tolerated.
Other Notes:
It will be helpful for each participant to bring a
backpack or messenger bag in which to carry around collected materials,
as well as any small gifts you might want to get separately for the
judges. Gifts probably have no bearing on a team's final score.
Our favorite Japanese suijin is probably the kappa. This is good information.
You will be doing a lot of walking, probably more than
you've ever done on a single day, unless you’ve done our other
hunts, or unless you’ve been court-ordered to walk everywhere.
Wear good shoes and bring water with you or be prepared to buy it along
the way.
It is also perfectly okay to wear a hat.
The show will go on regardless of the weather. Please dress appropriately.
Refunds:
We can refund money through June 3. Then we can't. Oh, and we can only
refund money that has already been paid, so don't try anything funny.
Sample Questions (from previous hunts):
Get a photo of one teammate behind the wheel of a New York taxicab. Check here if you got the photo: ____
At the U.S. Customs House, there is a rotunda. Stand
in the center of the rotunda. Look up. See the paintings by Reginald
Marsh? We are looking for the name of one of the ships. Not the land of
Rouen and Caen, it shares a space with a boat named for a state that
was inducted into the union one July many years ago. What ship are we
looking for? ___________________
Go to the R. H. Sangster painting on Franklin west of
West Broadway. The sun shines directly on where you must go next. Now
go there. Find the building with all the numbers on it. What number has
no little box above it? _____
How many trashcans are there on the Brooklyn Bridge
(for the purposes of this hunt, the bridge is the span from the
Manhattan side where the concrete starts after the paving stones end,
going across to the Brooklyn side where pedestrians can first exit on
the left down the stairs)? ____
Working in an office day-in, day-out can really be
depressing. That’s why Metro Metro has its offices in a zeppelin
made of spun glass and saffron. Gene Grant at 333 Houston isn’t
so lucky with his office location. But what does he have in the
basement? ____________
Frequently Asked Questions
Why four people to a team?
- Because three is not enough and five is too many.
What does the entry fee go to?
- Here's what you get for that money: a
daylong hunt, various goodies, trinkets and maps in your packet, a
rented-out bar with some free drinks and free ziti (usually), and
top-notch prizes if your team does really well or has the best costume.
That stuff, as well as the printing costs, website maintenance, and
design costs adds up, but we do our best to keep the price down by
making the granola bars out of fiber board, and stealing what we can
from children.
What is a Pay Night?
- We like to have teams pay the
registration fee in person. That way, we can get to know you guys and
you can get to know us. And we can have a couple of beers together.
Sure, you can pay via PayPal, but that is a lot less fun. Also, teams
that come to Pay Nights will receive specific hints about answers to
the hunt.
How's that for incentive?
- Pretty good.
Tell me more about the costumes. What's the scoop?
-Costumes are extremely encouraged - but
not mandatory - they will help out with your final score, and there
will be rewards. Please be considerate and avoid making costumes out of
common allergens. For example, a costume constructed entirely of
peanuts, penicillin, and dust mite excretions would be unsporting.
I knew about the hunt for a really long
time, but I didn't get around to signing up, and now the deadline has
passed. I might be very good friends with Bo, Brady, or Will and/or
Also Ed and/or And Tim. I might have lots of money to throw around.
Maybe my cousin told me the wrong deadline. I might be really cool and
fun and worth spending time with. Maybe I'm attractive and flirty. Can
I sign up late?
- No.
What's the deal with cameras? Can we use digital?
- TEAMS ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR PROVIDING THEIR OWN CAMERAS. And, by
extension, their own pictures. You can turn in any printed photo that
you've taken, whether it be regular film, Polaroid, or printouts from a
digital camera. We will not accept disks or jump drives or things like
that - each picture must be its own item, submitted with the rest of
the packet. We recommend the photo be big enough that we can see what
it is, so we can give you points. We simply love giving points.
What if we don't get our pictures developed in time?
- You lose a lot of points. A LOT of points.
Can we use a car or bike or something to navigate the city during the hunt?
- NO CARS AND NO BIKES THIS YEAR. Seriously.
Though both modes of transportation have been allowed in the past,
especially bikes, they will not be permitted this year.
Do you know what time it is?
- As of this writing, it is 7:58 PM.
What happens if the solution to the clue is missing, damaged, or non-existent?
- We try to double-check all of the clues
before the day of the hunt, but there remains the chance that
construction, graffiti, or the like will make a clue unsolvable. We are
reachable by phone on the day of the hunt, so if the issue comes up we
will be able to check it out. As for damage to a clue, we hope that our
participants will not vandalize what we put a lot of work into, but
that is not always the case. If you see someone messing with a clue,
let us know.
Will whining be tolerated?
- Whining will not be tolerated.
I'm under twenty-one years old. Is that a problem?
- Nope. You pay full price, but you won't
be able to drink alcohol at the bar. Them's the breaks. Or, to be
grammatically correct, "The breaks are they."
I'm under eighteen years old. Is that a problem?
- Nope. Same deal as the under
twenty-ones. We will endeavor to make any rated-R questions so
beautifully subtle and stunningly hidden among literary references that
they'll be over your head until you are old enough to watch Caligula.
Go ask your parents. However, we aren't responsible for any mature
content you encounter on the way from other teams.
Is it true that 87% of dolphins are left-handed?
- Dolphins do not have hands, so they
cannot be left-handed. However, if you caught a dolphin, sewed a hand
onto it, and then abandoned it in a parking lot, you could claim that
the dolphin was left handed. But good luck getting 87% of them.
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