Winner of Perplex City tells his story

Back in February, Andy Darley wrote about winning the first Perplex City alternate reality game. He also put a lot of photos on Flickr about going to the Rockingham Forest and finding the Receda Cube, worth $200,000.

200704201311It was then that I realised I was practically standing on a spot where the
topsoil was the colour of the clay that ought to be hidden underneath it.

It
wasn't 10m from the post, it was slightly further — practically a
continuation of the line I'd just investigated, exactly where you'd end up
burying something if you walked 10m, stopped, and leaned forward to start
digging. Seeing sub-surface clay with just a very thin covering of the
material that was several inches thick elsewhere was deeply suspicious. If
this wasn't the evidence for a hole that had been dug and then filled in, I
didn't know what it was. I unpacked my trowel and cut straight down into it.

I'm trying to remember, and I think at this point I already knew I was onto
something good, even before I'd gone very deep. It was the most promising
spot I'd yet seen – it fitted the clues and it had good archaeology – and it
had come at a moment when I was at a pretty low ebb. Six inches down, my
trowel nicked something dark in the side wall of the hole that crackled when
I prodded it. Just a couple of square millimeters of whatever it was, and at
that point it behaved exactly like the tree root bark I'd been finding since
Friday – it looked the same, and it made the same noises when poked. I
cleared more of the sticky clay away from it with the tip of my trowel, and
found that it was definitely plastic – not bark, but a bag. Plastic bags get
buried for all sorts of reasons, usually accidental, so I refused to allow
myself to believe it was the Cube. Nevertheless, I rocked back on my heels
to take a photo. It's not a great photo, all blurry, but it turned out to be
a pretty important photo – because moments later I cleared enough of the
clay to run a gloved hand along the plastic and feel a hard, heavy, straight
edge inside it.

That was when it hit me, that was when I knew I'd found the Cube.

Andy reports that he's received "lots of lovely messages from the others players,
including most of the ones who came closest to winning. Most of the prize
money is safely tucked away for a house purchase, but I also donated $8,000
to pay for a year's running costs for unFiction, and I bumped up the
player-donated reward for helping find Satoshi to $1,000
(www.billion2one.org). Things have been fairly quiet apart from that –
carrying on with freelance web design work and nursing my fledgling
ecommerce site, www.mybathroomfinder.com."

Link

Previously on Boing Boing:

Perplex City

More on Perplex City

Fan song created for Perplex City

Perplex City players need help to crack encryption

Alternate reality games

SF Weekly on Jane McGonigal

Microsoft's new alternate reality game