In BLINK, you assume the role of a babysitter watching over Lily Vida, daughter of a local psychiatrist. A regular night of babysitting takes a sinister turn when someone or something attempts to kidnap Lily.

This game is great so far and I can't wait to see where it leads! Very atmospheric and spooky! Haven't had this type of adrenaline rush playing a game since going through Outlast. Will be sharing with my buddies and rerunning to find anything I might have missed! :)


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Crazy game! Really well done and I love the blink mechanic. I sometimes had the feeling I saw something right before blinking and then it was gone... real spooky. For a free game that's a 10/10 for me. I would've paid for that. One of the hidden gems here. Cheers!

Almost all the interactions with Mr Bits and the subtle clues towards his existence (before he reveals himself) are just creepy enough to keep the player on their toes. Teleporting the player inbetween blinks and forcing the player to interact with what I can only assume is a demon creates a strong feeling of tension.

I was doing some binocular stargazing last night around 10:30, and noticed an odd blinking light while I was observing M42. I was observing at one of our public gameland areas in southern part of Sandhills in NC. There are no visible artificial light sources in view, so it makes for a nice observing site. It's listed as a class 4, but I'd put it on the darker end if I were to guess. Very faint artificial glow near the horizon, but directly overhead, I could clearly see the band of stars in the milky way, and M42 was easily visible to my unaided eye. Per Astronomics, we had clear Skies, excellent transparency and Average seeing. Anyway, just giving an idea of where I was observing, and in what conditions.

So, long story longer, I was observing M42 with my 10x42 Vortex binos, and I noticed a faint blinking light near the upper cluster of stars in the sword. It was not visible to my naked eye, as it was only a large as some of the smaller visible stars. It would blink one time about every 5 seconds according to my count. It was moving much slower than any satellite, and unlike any satellite I've seen, it was not continuously illuminated. It was only visible when it blinked. Way too small or too high to be any airplane, unless they're spying on us with the U2. I've marked the photo below with small pink dots to try and show the approximate path it was moving, as well as how far it would move between blinks. The actual light was white, not pink. Just understand, this is how I remember the location and movement almost 20 hours later.

No clue. I'm new to all of this, so I can't say I've ever seen tumbling space junk. Assuming space junk travels across the sky as fast as other satellites, then no. This was moving very slow. It actually took a few blink cycles (10 to 15 seconds) for me to even realize it was moving in comparison to the surrounding stars. I tried spacing the dots on the image to represent how far it moved every blink, which was about 5 seconds each.

The speed suggests a geosynchronous orbit, though the illustrated direction means it is not geostationary. The blinking suggests a tumbling object, either an old rocket body or a defunct satellite that has lost its stability.

The speed and the blinking don't match with a Starlink satellite. 


The speed suggests a geosynchronous orbit, though the illustrated direction means it is not geostationary. The blinking suggests a tumbling object, either an old rocket body or a defunct satellite that has lost its stability.

Probably a geo-synch. Some of the older satellites have a blinking light that would be turned on when controllers were performing a maintenance check or when repositioning the satellite. These were fairly common in the early eighties and nineties.

I'm bumping this thread, because I was observing Orion on Monday night, and I saw the same thing! It was in a slightly different position near the belt, but it blinked like an airplane once every 30 seconds or so. It didn't really stay in place exactly, but it didn't move far during that time. Really odd.

I had almost the exact same experience last night 12/10/2023 from our homestead in Baja California Sur. I was guiding some friends around the sky with our Oberwerks binocular telescope and while they were observing the Orion nebula through the scope I saw a very faint flash just above it with my naked eyes. I brought the telescope up onto the light, with 40x and a 70 degree FOV it was just above and outside the field of view of M42, almost or identical to your observed location. At first it seemed stationary but after 5-10 minutes it was clearly moving very, very slowly. Unlike your account it was moving in a downward direction from roughly NE to SW. The blinking was very faint to invisible by eye but quite clear in the telescope, there was no particular pattern to the blink sometimes a couple in few seconds, sometimes maybe 15 seconds apart and everything in between, a random order as far as I could determine. I observed it for 15 minutes or so remarking that I had never seen anything like it before, but I let it go at that point since it was interrupting our guests experience of skywatching.

It was a singular experience for sure. I will be monitoring that area in the near future to see if I can spot it again. To my mind a geosynchronous satellite or debris is the only logical explanation. I had never thought much about the possibility of viewing them before although we see loads of low orbit satellites moving overhead every single night from this location.

My MBL seems to have stopped working as of last night. It has a solid BLUE light but blinks quickly as RED then goes back to solid BLUE. I am hoping the fact it isnt solid red means the drive is still alive.

I understand that your RBS50 is continually blinking white after a factory reset. The behavior usually occurs when the RBR and the RBS are on different FW versions. Please check your RBR50 firmware version to ensure it is on the same firmware as your RBS50. If the firmware versions are different please update your Orbi mesh system to the firmware version 2.7.5.4.

I can't gain access to the RBS web page, tried 192.168.1.1 and 192.168.1.250. The only time I can get a network connection out of the unit is by invoking the procedure for TFTP. I am able to carry out the TFTP process fine, (at least goes as expected) but when the firmware image is uploaded there is no discernible change in behavior (still continues to blink white).

On the Addison front, I am always happy when she comes back to Seattle Grace. I never thought she should have left in the first place, but I understand why it happened the way that it did. I would have liked to have seen her interact with some of the other characters more, but given the circumstances of the medical case she was brought in for, I can let it slide. After all, the brief time she did have with some of the other docs did lead to the bad, but hilarious, idea of trying to set up Bailey. There a lot of good moments last night, but I think the episode highlight for me was when Bailey gave that poor doctor that McDreamy tried to set her up with her two-minute life story. It was pure genius and totally Bailey. e24fc04721

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