Skip Navigation

In which scenario would you last longer before being outed as a time traveller?

  1. Being dropped 500 years ago into your ancestors' community.
  2. Being dropped 500 years into the future in your community.

You have a day to source some clothing appropriate to the time period. Unfortunately, that's not enough time to learn a dialect.

56 comments
  • I mean this seems like an easy answer to me no? People in the past wouldn't suspect you're from the future, they'd think you were posessed or something. People in the future would be much more likely to think of time travel, plus they'd have records of old accents and stuff.

    • Time travel to the future is interesting but not harmful. Time travel to the past is disastrous. But no one had concept if it do you'd be free to overwrite the future.

  • I think the language/dialect barrier would be a huge one in either case. To wit, the historical versions of the lords prayer- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Lord%27s_Prayer_in_English

    Future would be rough with a near complete lack of knowing current cultural norms, lingo, history, and knowing how the three seashells work. Top that off with all the stuff developed in just the past 100 years vs. the amount of progress we could be making in 5 times that length of time, and I feel like the future would be a lot rougher then the past.

    In the past you could excuse a minor faux pas by saying you didn't get off the farm much and maybe folks would just think you were a bit slow. Not being socialized in the present or future? Bit less reasonable.

    • You've got it. In 500 years we'll never advanced so much and there will have been so much current exchange and drift I doubt you could be understood at all.

      In the 1500s you could get by as a foreigner who barely understood the language. You'd have zero cultural norms so most language that wasn't literal would be unintelligible.

  • Ancestors, since they'd be far more likely rationalise my bizarre present-day manner as being possessed by demons or something to that effect rather than assuming I'm from half a millennium in the future, I can't say I have any specific guesses as to what the society of 2523 might look like, but I suspect that they'd be far more likely to jump to the somewhat improbable sci-fi explanation of time travel (or perhaps some other technological explanation like mind malware if brain implants become a thing) than assuming supernatural explanations of demons or witchcraft.

  • I'm thinking past could work better, as you could pretend to be mute or have a very limited vocabulary. Future could be anything and will probably have an uninhabitable atmosphere.

  • In the past, I probably wouldn't be found out, but I'd probably also die more easily. I'd have to be in Tudor England to even have a chance of speaking the language. If it was a dice roll of going to where "my ancestors" lived, I could end up anywhere in Europe, and parts of western asia and north africa.

    In the future, they might find me out, but I'd also probably have a much better time of surviving. I'd prefer to go to the future.

    A translator app on a phone could probably make heads and tails of my English dialect (I mean, they can do that today), and travel would be as fast as modern travel or faster, so once I identified a locale that I thought I'd like I could try to get to it. Basically, more opportunity would mean more options to be safe, and to survive.

    • Making some pretty bold assumptions about what's going to be left in 500 years lol

  • My ancestors are from at least 6 different countries and many of them spoke languages I can't even really speak the modern equivalents of.

    I think as long as I remain mute people will just think I'm a simpleton or the local equivalent (since I don't understand them and don't know how to work 16th century tech).

    In 500 years from now, presumably they will know that time travel has been invented so they will be more likely to suspect it.

  • 500 years into the future. Far easier to adapt and hopefully the English dialect hasn't changed severally or devolved into random internet jibberish.

56 comments