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An omnilingual cryptographic system which disguises itself as a scrambled substitution cipher. Glyphs are prearranged in groups of four and it is the differences between items within these groups which comprise the actual information. These "words" represent and describe any sound made by any method with any frequency content, and their "strings" (monolinear arrangements) describe the shape, structure and context.
The details of how to properly encode/decode these symbols will remain secret. This is designed in part to inspire others to invent their own systems of this kind. Think about how to do what I claim here to have done, carry it out, and you will have devised yourself something which is human-readable on its own yet as secure as a One-Time Pad.
Gemseeker texts feature in several video games of mine, although the system is only used to display jokes and Easter Egg messages. People know I'm on this site by now, so I can't give them all away on here, can I? ;)
Written language of the Skalmish, people within my simulation ESOSVM. These were the people initially used to colonize the universe "Rskalmwayt" wherein several stories take place, including Dheen's Folly and Trap Farmer Brer Brah. 5132 random selections were taken from Oinai stock and placed on Planet Fyromr, and their descendants became the Fyromrese. Tandem AIs then began to refine and alter remnants of Unified Oinai language into this.
Glyphs of this style can be seen on cave walls, objects, signs, records, etc. dating up to the time when I began to intervene in the workings of the Rskalmwayt simulation (ESOSVM Canonical Year 16573440000). They were always pixel art - no high-res renditions of these shapes were ever created, so there's ample room for reinterpretation.
Like most Runic languages (including Elder Futhark), these glyphs have a specific ordering associated with them. Additionally, in written Skalmish the glyphs which make up a word are always written in alphabetical order. Glyphs have no associated sound components. They were used to record gestural communications, so there's no way to speak them. Had this language been spoken, however, it probably would have used a priority-based system wherein certain glyphs were pronounced before others or preferentially stressed. Kind of like Thai language, but way more convoluted.
Inspired by Greenstar987's GS Unicode 2.0 series (General idea), and Paul Hardy's GNU Unifont (Proportions). I gotten the idea to create a pixel font that supports Unicode.
-- Planes --
Plane 0 - Basic Multilangual Plane — [Here]
Plane 1 - Supplementary Multilangual Plane — [Here]
Plane 2 - Supplementary Ideographic Plane — [Here]
Plane 3 - Tertiary Ideographic Plane — [This]
[No characters have been defined in planes 4 through D as of Unicode 15.0]
Plane E - Supplementray Special-purpose Plane — [Here]
Plane F - Supplementary Private Use Area-A — [PUA]
Plane 10 - Supplementary Private Use Area-B — [PUA]
-- Note --
Ignore the fact that the "TIP" tag is all in lowercase when it should have been in capital letters. Whoever thought of the tag wrote it like that.