My uncle gave me a time travel device. I can go to the past or future by turning the crown. I can go minutes or hours in time, or there's a calendar so I can go days or months into the future. I can probably go years, but it would take a lot of crown-turning. What do I do?
>Go to the day I was born
>Fix an embarrassing mistake
>Talk to my future self
>Get lottery numbers
>Go to medieval times
>Go 400 years into the future
This idea was probably in some movie or book I never saw.
Get lottery numbers
>>489956
Or even better
>Step one: Go to Transilvania
>Step 2: Find Dracula (in time)
>Step 3: Become a vampire
>Step 4:ZA WARUDO! TOKI WO TOMARE
>>489956
medieval times
When has going into the past *EVER* benefited anyone? All it causes is paradoxes and confusion.
I get it, you want to take the timeline and make pretty knots with it, but let's be honest here- the smart and practical thing to do is use it to see the future and plan accordingly.
>>489956
Future
>>489956
>get lottery numbers
we can buy a perfect suit of plate armor for when we want to go back to the medieval times
should go back to the golden age of piracy with an AR15 too
>>489956
Whatever else we might want to do, we'll need resources. A lottery seems like a low-risk way of doing that.
Grab the numbers for some local lottery, and modify them slightly to buy a ticket to win something less than the full jackpot (a side pot of the better part of a million, rather than hundreds of millions).
After that, you'll want to arrange to enjoy this for as long as possible, by finding out the secrets of immortality and other technologies from the future and bringing them back here. However, if you don't want to get caught and stuck there, you'll need to plan ahead so you don't stick out. Carrying significant amounts of old cash won't work more than a few years into the future. So, set yourself up a couple of bank accounts and investment accounts, memorize the passwords, hop fifty years into the future (not 400, you'll be too lost), get yourself set up with an Internet connection, and snag an offline copy of all of Wikipedia and some portable computing devices.
Then return here and do some thorough research on the state of the world at that time.
OP trolled you guys clearly. Cmon.
>>491028
Would 1.5 mil be good?