Prilozhenie Poisk Slov: Skachat
The train ride from Moscow to St. Petersburg was long, and Anton was bored. He opened the app store and typed a quick search: prilozhenie poisk slov skachat . He just wanted a simple word search game to kill time.
He didn't think much of it until the next level. The list of words changed: Siniy Zhilet (Blue Vest) Chay (Tea) Vosemnadtsat (Eighteen) prilozhenie poisk slov skachat
The train entered a tunnel, plunging the carriage into total darkness. When the lights flickered back on a minute later, seat 14B was empty. Anton’s phone lay on the floor, the screen cracked, displaying nothing but a standard app store search page: prilozhenie poisk slov skachat . The train ride from Moscow to St
The game started normally. The grid was a mess of Cyrillic letters, and the list of words to find was standard: Cofe (Coffee), Kniga (Book), Vokzal (Station). Anton swiped his finger across the screen, highlighting the words. As he found "Vokzal," the train let out a sharp whistle, exactly in sync with the haptic buzz of his phone. He just wanted a simple word search game to kill time
He tried to delete the app, but the icon wouldn't move. He tried to power off the phone, but the screen stayed bright. The grid cleared itself, and a single sentence appeared in the middle of the screen:
Anton looked up. A ticket collector in a was walking down the aisle. He stopped at Anton’s row and handed him a cup of tea . Anton looked at the clock on the wall of the carriage; it was exactly 18:00 .