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Bill first appears physically in "Dreamscapers". However, many references to him are hidden throughout the backgrounds of the episodes and within the opening of the series. He is also a prominent character in the Gravity Falls book, Gravity Falls: Journal 3. A novel centering on Bill Cipher, titled The Book of Bill, [1] was released on July 23 ...
Bill Cipher kills them during Weirdmageddon, although a coded message in the book Gravity Falls: Journal 3 implies they sent holo-projections from the future for the mission and are still alive. The Henchmaniacs are a gang of interdimensional demons who are released in "Weirdmageddon" and unleash havoc upon Gravity Falls under Bill's command.
The gang enters into a psychological version of the Mystery Shack in Stan's mind, where all of his memories are kept; amongst those memories is the combination of the safe, which Bill and Gideon must obtain. While the team is searching to find the safe combination before Bill does, the dream demon manages to disguise himself as Soos and follow ...
The Cipher Hunt was an alternate reality game and international scavenger hunt created by storyboard artist and voice actor Alex Hirsch based on his animated series Gravity Falls. The goal was to find the real-life statue of the series' antagonist Bill Cipher, which was briefly glimpsed at the end of the series finale. The hunt involved ...
This is a category for block ciphers that have been broken. "Broken" here means that there is a published attack that is computationally faster than a brute force attack . Note that most cryptanalytic attacks against ciphers are still too complex to apply in practice.
GIF became popular because it used Lempel–Ziv–Welch data compression. Since this was more efficient than the run-length encoding used by PCX and MacPaint, fairly large images could be downloaded reasonably quickly even with slow modems. The original version of GIF was called 87a. [1] This version already supported multiple images in a stream.
Despite releasing the PC version, Virgin was not interested in publishing the game on the PlayStation, feeling that only 3D games would sell for the console. [17] As a result, Cecil contacted Sony Computer Entertainment, who agreed to release the game for the console. [17] In North America, Broken Sword was renamed to Circle of Blood. [6]
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