Treasure Hunters Challenge: Week 5

The fifth challenge provides a new clue from Laird on our phone: The Fulton Paddleboat was a key form of transportation up until the civil war. banks used them to transport gold to hiding places safe from military coffers. as Union forces advanced, soldiers became treasure hunters as they searched for these hidden deposits. you are to take this paddleboat upriver to where one of these American treasures was discovered. The paddleboat also plays a prominent role in some of the writings of Mark Twain, which will come into play later.

This challenge starts on the deck of one of these paddleboats, and as has been the custom, the clue on how to start the challenge is becoming less apparent. Also thankful is the disappearance of the sponsors. That’s not to say that they aren’t there, they just aren’t so prevalent. It makes the challenge more enjoyable. The coupling of a more difficult challenge with less sponsorship is a good change.

On the deck there are two apparent ways to go – up or down – but there is also no obvious indicator of which makes more sense, so at this point, it’s up to you which way to go. Unlike some of the earlier challenges, this one can be done in any order to some degree.

You do have to do certain steps in a certain order, but if you want to go down and then go up, you can, it just might not make as much sense. Just make sure that you don’t end up at the end of the challenge without the pieces you’re supposed to get at the beginning. Otherwise you might have to start all over!

  • On the deck, click the lantern on the wall and click again to store in your backpack. You’ll need it later.
  • Click the stairs going up.
  • Click the piece of paper to the left of the steering wheel and click again to store it in your backpack.
  • Click the chest to approach it.
  • Click the chest to open it.
  • Click the wheel and click again to store it in your backpack.
  • Click Go Back.
  • Click Return to Deck.
  • Click the stairs going down.
  • You’ll find yourself in the engine room. Click the pipes to turn the into position. Your objective is to make a complete system where none of the steam can escape. If it does, the steam won’t be able to power the wheel. Click each section of pipe so that it turns into position. There is at least one possible solution. There may be others.
  • After your system is complete, click your backpack.
  • Click the wheel to select it, then again to use snap it into place and again to turn it.
  • Once you’ve started the engine, click your backpack, then click the piece of paper, and click again to put it into place over the steam vent to view a page from Tom Sawyer. This is a big hint.
  • Click Continue, then Return to Deck.
  • Click the stairs going up.
  • Click the wheel.
  • Enter your destination. But where should you go?
  • You should go to St. Petersburg, Missouri (the setting for Tom Sawyer).
  • There is one problem with this, and that is that St. Petersburg, Missouri doesn’t exist on any map (including the one in the game). That isn’t really a problem – you can enter St. Petersburg, Missouri and it will work. But the boat will actually go to Hannibal, Missouri (which also happens to be the birthplace of Mark Twain, the author of Tom Sawyer, and the basis for St. Petersburg). There are reports that this doesn’t always work, but I’ve tried several iterations, with the hidden page and without and never had a problem with it, so I can’t say why this is.
  • Click Return to Deck.
  • Click the gangplank to get off the boat.
  • Click Continue.
  • Click the sword above the wall and click again to store it in your backpack.
  • Click the opening to enter the cave.
  • Use the sword to dig in the dirt to find the clue.
  • Look for a disturbed section of ground.
  • It’s in the far right, just a bit over the Exit Cave button.
  • Click on it when you find it.
  • You’re done!

That’s it for this week. Check back for next week’s challenge summary.

Looking for other challenges? Check out the Treasure Hunters Challenge entry. If you want to discuss the overall game theory, discuss it there please, and leave this for challenge-specific information.


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Comments

95 responses to “Treasure Hunters Challenge: Week 5”

  1. Kristi Avatar
    Kristi

    So glad you posted the destination. It was taking me forever!

  2. Misty Miller Avatar
    Misty Miller

    Holy Cow! I have not had any problems with the clues until July 17ths…grrrrr I can’t say thank you enough..lol I tried to type some of the “phrases” from the paper into “Ask” but it never gave me anything about Mark Twain… Well, thanks for the help!

  3. Paula Avatar
    Paula

    Thank you so much!!! I never found that piece of paper, what is with the lanterns? I could get like four lanterns off the ship and still have one in my back pack but never used it.

  4. cj Avatar
    cj

    Wow, thank you. I have been at this puzzle for 7 days, hours at a time, I kept getting 3 lanterns and of course tried everything in that category. 🙁

    I did see Mark Twain mentioned once and didn’t even think of his Tom Sawyer book, thank you sincerely.

  5. Karen Avatar
    Karen

    Thank you. I was able to start the paddleboat but had no clue where it was to go. I had used my help to find all the pieces to get the chain across the water. You have been bookmarked.

  6. Ladywild Avatar
    Ladywild

    I have done all the other ones myself but that was a really hard one since I must have missed the Mark Twain clue somewhere along the way.

  7. Zek Avatar
    Zek

    The way I found Hannibal, Missouri, was by entering the darkest phrase from the page — “first time, the deep stillness of the place” at ask.com, and then it will pop up the result “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (published 1876) is a very well-known and popular story concerning American youth. Mark Twain’s lively tale is set in St. Petersburg, Missouri, a fictionalized town based on Mark Twain’s hometown of Hannibal, Missouri” — there you go!

  8. Crissie Avatar
    Crissie

    Thank you so much for offering advice! I was stumped on the destination. The rest I was able to figure out. Thank you again.

  9. JJ Avatar
    JJ

    Thank you for the site! You’re the best! WE COULD NOT HAVE DONE IT WITHOUT YOU!!!!

  10. Lorna Avatar
    Lorna

    I had totally missed the paper the first time I played Monday night, even though I must have clicked on every square inch of that %$^&* boat, and I spent two hours trying to guess the place to go, did the Fulton Paddle Boat search, tried every name & place I saw in every link I could find, even found that Mark Twain reference, but it showed Mark Twain’s birth place as Florida, Missouri which does not work.

    I gave up Monday and found you, thankfully, tonight when I had the courage to try a few more places.

    Thanks for being here!

    P.S. Typing in St. Petersburg, Missouri did not work for me, but if you type in the first red colored phrase of the paper at Ask.com and use quotation marks, it will give you only one link…Encyclopedia: Mark Twain, with this comment “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (published 1876) is a very well-known and popular story concerning American youth. Mark Twain’s lively tale is set in St. Petersburg, Missouri, a fictionalized town based on Mark Twain’s hometown of Hannibal, Missouri…”