Randonautica. A quantum app with strange effects

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randonautica

The app takes you to places in your own area that you wouldn't normally go to and some disturbing findings have occurred as a result of people following its directions.  You are supposed to think of a general subject when you run the app and the findings seem to relate.  As usual, I am skeptical of people's conclusions but I am intrigued because of my own experiments with the number 23 and how creepy the results start to become.

QUOTE: "Randonautica is said to generate three types of coordinates: an attractor, a void, and an anomaly. An attractor is a coordinate with the highest, "most significant" concentration of quantum dots, which could possibly inspire and uplift the users; a void is the antonym of it; and an anomaly can be described as both an attractor and a void.[3] It is inspired by the chaos theory and Guy Debord's Theory of the Derive.[1] The quantum data is powered by the Australian National University."
(This post was last modified: 2020-08-22, 10:19 PM by Brian.)
[-] The following 3 users Like Brian's post:
  • Typoz, Laird, Sciborg_S_Patel
From their own site: https://www.randonautica.com/got-questions

"The project does not claim to meet academic standards. We are somewhere in the middle between a game, science, and art, and we try to take as much as possible from each of them, because we believe that labeling and leading to a unified methodology limits the potential of activity.
The project’s lore (i.e. the compilation of user reports) is non-narrative and is created on the basis of the adventures of the participants themselves, so even creators cannot certainly say what is true and what is fiction in it. The surface goal of randonauting is simply to pay more attention to the world and its hidden parts. Some theoretical concepts can be artistically or spiritually complemented.
The technological part of the project is based on real scientific research, although the methodology for their application may deviate from the academic standards for research, as we are more inventors than academic scientists. Nevertheless, we welcome all scientists who are ready to help us with scientifically accurate analysis of the results and extracting the maximum of useful information from them"
I chose this video because it obviously isn't fake and there is a very scary ending. 

It seems the videos that have most of the weird stuff are on Reddit or Tik-Tok so are probably staged.  Those users that seem most serious often come up with nothing or something possible but maybe reading too much into the synchronicity.  The developers of the app were not interested specifically in creepy or paranormal things but in exploring synchronicities for their own sake.  To this end, I am still interested.  23 worked for me so maybe there is more to this app than creepy juvenile kicks.
(This post was last modified: 2020-08-24, 06:27 PM by Brian.)
[-] The following 2 users Like Brian's post:
  • OmniVersalNexus, Sciborg_S_Patel

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