Pokémon TCG: Sword and Shield—Brilliant Stars

Riddle

One way is to ask one of them, "If I were to ask you which path goes to (my destination), which one would you point to?" The truthteller will point you in the right direction, because he would have anyway and would be telling the truth. The liar will point you in the right direction too, because he would have pointed you in the wrong one, but will lie about that. You don't even have to ask twice, since they'll give the same answer.
 
sjmp said:
No One Has Even Guessed At Mine (The Colours One).

I'll Give You A Clue, I't Somthing To Do With A Sport. I'm Not Sure How Popular This Sport Is In The U.S Or Canada, But You Should Have Heard Of It.
Tiddly winks?

Sorry, no idea.

It's not some kind of martial art, is it? If it is, bear in mind that different dojos use different intermediate color belts.
 
No, But You Are Getting Close... It's A Game Thats Played On A Table.

Remember You Need To Know The 2 Colours, Not The Sport They Come From.
 
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sjmp said:
No, But You Are Getting Close... It's A Game Thats Played On A Table.

Remember You Need To Know The 2 Colours, Not The Sport They Come From.
I've Just Been Told That No American Has Played This Sport Profesionaly, So Because The People On This Board Are Mainly From The US I'll Tell Everyone The Answer (People From Outside The US Should Kick Themselves)
The 2 Colours Are: Green And Yellow, Because They Are All The Colours Of Snooker Balls.

Here's Another To Get Everyone Going Again, Nice And Easy This Time.

Think of words ending in -GRY. Angry and hungry are two of them. There are only three words in the English language. What is the third word? The word is something that everyone uses every day. If you have listened carefully, I have already told you what it is
 
Riddles Are Usualy About Misdirection. The First Line Has Nothing To Do With The Question, It Just Gets You Thinking About Somthing Else.

Here's Another Riddle I Like: A man walks up to you and says - "everything I say to you is a lie."
Is he telling you the truth or is he lying?

And:A farmer and his hired help were carrying grain to the barn. The farmer carried one sack of grain and the hired help carried two sacks. Who carried the heavier load and why?

The Top One Has Nothing To Do With Misdirection, But The Bottom Does (Well Kind Of).
 
sjmp said:
Riddles Are Usualy About Misdirection. The First Line Has Nothing To Do With The Question, It Just Gets You Thinking About Somthing Else.

Here's Another Riddle I Like: A man walks up to you and says - "everything I say to you is a lie."
Is he telling you the truth or is he lying?

And:A farmer and his hired help were carrying grain to the barn. The farmer carried one sack of grain and the hired help carried two sacks. Who carried the heavier load and why?

The Top One Has Nothing To Do With Misdirection, But The Bottom Does (Well Kind Of).
The second one is the farmer, he carried a sack filled with grain, while the help carried two empty sacks.
 
That would be where fuzzy logic comes in, where you have a card that says "The statement on the other side of this card is true" on one side, and on the other side it says "The statement on the other side of this card is false", in this case both statements are only half-right. And that makes my head hurt so I'm not going to go into it any further. :nonono:
 
I wouldn't call it misdirection so much as ignoring implications and taking things literally. I mean with the farmer riddle you already set the scene saying the farmer and the help were carrying grain to the barn. If the next line read "They each carried one sack" most people would probably take your meaning as each carried a sack of grain.
 
How about this: someone took something from you. You didn't see them take it, but when you get it back, you know it's yours. What is it?

Kinda lame, I know....That Coffee Coolatta isn't helping me...>^_^<
 
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