• The upgrade to XenForo 2.3.7 has now been completed. Please report any issues to our administrators.

The Dark Knight ACME SECURITY - New Joker game! (E-Mail from Gordon on 4/18)

I'll bet everyone's staring at that delos camera picture now :)
 
I have it on two seperate e-mail accounts, one came at 5:19, the other 5:45 (EST).
 
"But a C.I. just like you just gave us some information on their last known whereabouts. Now all we need is to catch them. This is where you come in."

It may just be escaping me, but what is C.I.?????
 
anyone come up with a list of possible airline codes for the game next week?

The ACCESS code we thought might go with Kinsly Travel but it ended up going with the survey phone call. As far as other "codes" go, there's always that "subscription number" that goes with one of the spam e-mail.
 
"But a C.I. just like you just gave us some information on their last known whereabouts. Now all we need is to catch them. This is where you come in."

It may just be escaping me, but what is C.I.?????
criminal informant/investigator?
 
Confidential Informant.
I know this now because I asked on the old thread.
 
"But a C.I. just like you just gave us some information on their last known whereabouts. Now all we need is to catch them. This is where you come in."

It may just be escaping me, but what is C.I.?????

EDIT: Wrong in my guess
 
What do airline codes usually look like? Aren't they two sets of three letters, each set refering to a different airport?
 
What do airline codes usually look like? Aren't they two sets of three letters, each set refering to a different airport?

airline codes aren't airport codes, usually

airport codes are three letters long, DFW = Dallas ft. Worth, for example

But airline codes, unless its an abbreviation for an airline (like AA for American Airlines), could be anything.
 
What do airline codes usually look like? Aren't they two sets of three letters, each set refering to a different airport?

I'm under the impression that they are the alphabetical code for the airline, i.e. AA, UA, TWA, etc....
 
What do airline codes usually look like? Aren't they two sets of three letters, each set refering to a different airport?


airports have 3 letter designations make sure that is unique to each location. (eg - new orleans airport is MSY, Baton Rouge is BTR, Newark Airport is EWR, etc.) flight numbers are usually 4 digit codes. If I had to guess Gotham, it may be something like GCY or similar to that.
 
airports have 3 letter designations make sure that is unique to each location. (eg - new orleans airport is MSY, Baton Rouge is BTR, Newark Airport is EWR, etc.) flight numbers are usually 4 digit codes. If I had to guess Gotham, it may be something like GCY or similar to that.

Nope. I made that same mistake, but quara33 is right. You're thinking of AirPORT codes. These are airline codes.

My guess would be Gotham Air (GA). Which is based on nothing at all.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top
monitoring_string = "afb8e5d7348ab9e99f73cba908f10802"