Electronic computer instructions
This page relates to a reported minor bug: multiusing displayed a debug message: "numtimes is N" |
electronic computer instructions
Plural: electronic computer instructions
These are instructions that teach you how to assemble an electronic computer. All you need is these as a guide, and the parts. Well, the guide, the parts, and a bunch of time, a bunch of tools, a lot of cursing, several bandages, and a kid who's a decade younger and light-years smarter than you to eventually do the assembly for you. Without needing the instructions, naturally.
Miscellaneous Item
Autosell value: 20
Usable
How Obtained
When Used
You look over the electronic computer instructions. It lists everything you need to assemble a computer.
Part Needed | Quantity Needed | You Have |
---|---|---|
titanium chassis | 1 | n |
data plate | 1 | n |
memory tube | 2 | n |
electronic cabling | 2 | n |
power converter | 1 | n |
nanoprocessor | 1 | n |
If you don't have all the parts
It looks like you're missing a couple of pieces. If there's one thing you should know by now, it's that if you start without all the right stuff it can't possibly end well.
If you have the parts
It looks like you've got enough parts to assemble an electronic computer. Would you like to go ahead and put one together?
Build the Machine
With much bashing and smashing and crashing of the poor computer's parts, you eventually get a working model put together. Go to lab to install<br>
You got an item: electronic computer
Using multiple:
Same, except that when you have the items you get:
It looks like you've got enough parts to make at least one electronic computer. Would you like to go ahead and create one or more of them?
Notes
- Components are not consumed if you attempt to build and fail. The item itself is never consumed.
Although this item has a proper auto-sell value, it cannot be recyclonized, digitized, fed to the goats, or deplicated. |
References
- The build text ("bashing and smashing and crashing of the poor computer's parts") is suspiciously similar to the style of speech used by Gurgi in The Chronicles of Prydain by Lloyd Alexander.