
#LAYERS OF FEAR 2 MORSE CODE CODE#
What to enter at the TelegraphĮither in Act I or Act V, if you're looking at the telegraph, you'll need to enter the Morse code for S.O.S. That's dot-dot-dot for S, dash-dash-dash for O, and dot-dot-dot again. If you're new to Morse code, one dash equals about three dots. The game seems to be relatively forgiving with how you spell out the message and so long as it can identify you know what you're doing, you should complete the Easter egg and unlock your achievement or trophy. It's a Bronze level trophy on PS4, while on Xbox One it'll boost your Gamerscore by another 30 points. If achievement and trophy hunting isn't enough for you, consider this bonus riddle: what does S.O.S. Many say it's "save our ship" or "save our souls" - the latter would be rather fitting in Layers of Fear 2. In reality, though, it actually means. The acronym actually isn't an acronym at all.

It just became the go-to distress signal often used at sea, likely because of the ease with which listeners can identify the message. It doesn't get any easier without an actual telephone or instant messenger, and sadly that's not going to be an option on your descent into madness in Bloober Team's Layers of Fear 2.Long before Samuel Morse put his telegraphic code to work, neurons and other cells were processing extracellular dash- and dot-type signals into instructions for cellular decisions. Researchers in Germany recently reported on how the cell reads and responds to these directions. Signals from outside the cell control many intracellular programs, even directing how cells develop into organs and whole organisms.

Among other outcomes, these signals lead to bone growth, wound healing, and programmed cell death. In fact, nearly every type of cell utilizes extracellular instructions. Receptor proteins on the cell surface comprise the first layer in signal-relays that control whether a cell grows, divides, specializes, or dies.

When a receptor binds to its target molecule, it initiates an internal cascade of protein messengers that directs the cell to activate a genetic program.
