Indaloxian Circumventing Language refers to an ambivalent system of communication that uses the motion-logic of the Morse Code in an effort to transcend strict validation processes by combining movements with circumvented meaning.
Instead of conveying letters, Indaloxian communicates messages through sequences of leaps and motions. Meaning is inferred by the manner of motion, not merely by the message. Communication is, therefore, able to occur around points like "age gates," "keyword filters," or "logic traps" rather than directly through them.
Creators
The formation and conceptualization of Indaloxian systems have been sporadic. Mostly, this was done by individual experimentation rather than large-scale collective actions.
Radiant_Spite260 — An early independent developer who has contributed to conceptual and exploratory work. Their contributions are not in the form of formal documentation but are recognized as the first to introduce concepts that could align with the principles of Indaloxian circumvention. Their work is more in the form of prototypes or broken concepts.
Francis Aufsgreven — The man behind the Aufsgreven Alphabet. Almost inherently tied into the creation and intellectual theory of the Aufsgreven Alphabet, Francis Aufsgreven contributed significantly towards the creation of the alphabet as a non-verb, more or less representation-focused graph system. His importance in the study of Indaloxians is more or less self-explanatory.
Dialects
With time, Indaloxian Circumventing Language broke further into a few minor dialects; most of them have never spread widely, shaped by isolation or short-lived conditions.
Kethral
An in-group language maintained by a small, closed group. The vocabulary and meanings depend so much on shared context that this language is almost unintelligible to outsiders.
Ulixane
A dialect which evolved independently in far-off places. Interpretation relies on minute rhythm changes; even slight deviations can alter meaning entirely.
Arellic
A dialect that was conservative and resistant to change. The forms of the dialect remained stable, but narrow in use; therefore, it could hardly spread beyond its original speakers.
Extinct (Short-Lived)
Vandrix †
A high-intensity dialect that emerged rapidly under highly restrictive conditions. Once the conditions disappeared, so did it, leaving very little recorded structure behind it.
Brayven †
It is a compressed dialect that is optimized for speed and efficiency. Its extreme brevity made it effective, but unsustainable, and therefore, it was abandoned in record time.
Meaning
In Indaloxian Circumventing Language, meaning is not carried by words alone, but by motion patterns interpreted through Morse-derived structure. Communication is understood as a path rather than a statement.
The essence of the method is ingeniously simple:
- Jump means point (•).
- Move slightly to the right means dash (-).[1]
Thus, by combining jumps and steps, players can form words and sentences directly in the game, bypassing any text filters or restrictions. For example, four jumps in a row represent the letter "H," while the combination "jump, move, jump, jump" represents the letter "L."
This phenomenon has already been dubbed "Roblox sign language", It clearly demonstrates that any technical limitations are powerless against players' desire to communicate. While moderators tune neural networks to filter text, children return to 19th-century communication methods, adapting them for virtual reality.
Meaning is derived from:
- Sequence: the order of jumps and movements defines intent.
- Rhythm: timing between actions alters emphasis and urgency.
- Directionality: repeated movement implies successful bypass; interrupted movement implies resistance or adaptation.
- Context: interpretation depends on the surrounding environment, system, or barrier being navigated.
Rather than confronting constraints explicitly, Indaloxian constructs meaning through lateral navigation. A message is successful when the intended recipient understands the path taken, even if the system being traversed does not register a violation.
In this way, Indaloxian meaning is procedural rather than declarative, it shows how to move instead of stating what is blocked.
The Aufsgreven Alphabet
The Aufsgreven Alphabet is a non-verbal, graphical notation system associated with Indaloxian Circumventing Language. It is to be used only for the purposes of drawing and visual representations and cannot be delivered orally or in performances.
The Aufsgreven symbols impart meaning by shape, spacing, and orientation, forming a visual analogue to the motion-based sequences. The alphabet does not replace movement; it forms a static representation of ideas that would have been conveyed through jumps and direction of movement.
Because Indaloxian values flexibility and plausibility of denial, Aufsgreven was never intended for day-to-day use. The visual permanence of the script itself reduces flexibility, making it inappropriate for live or interactive contexts of any sort. For this reason, it appears primarily in diagrams, marginal notes, symbolic markings, or conceptual sketches.
Aufsgreven remains present as a supplementary system, preserved in illustration, analysis, and edge-case communication where movement is just not practical, or impossible.