
Take down the wall and you’ll be greeted with the anomaly seconds before it disappears into a wooden structure. After descending a few stairs, it’ll fly through a wall. Once found, the butterfly will head downstairs into the basement. You know, the thing Agent Jones turns into during the Zero Crisis Finale event. That’s where we found the anomaly which looks like an ethereal butterfly. Once there, check each house – I suggest heading towards the blue house in the North part of town. You’ll want to make your way to Lazy Lake upon exiting the Battle Bus. What makes this tricky is that Fortnite doesn’t actually tell you what the anomaly is or where to find it (beyond said lake). The first Agent Jones challenge tasks you with investigating an anomaly detected in Lazy Lake. For instance, the one that unlocks Jonesy’s first style, Jump 15, is revealed at level 14. Meaning, players will need to reach certain stages of the Battle Pass before they’re given a chance to complete each quest. The Agent Jones styles are treated like the Mandalorian armor plates.

Anomaly at weeping woods how to#
How to Unlock The First Agent Jones Style “Jump 15” in Fortnite
Anomaly at weeping woods update#
Our guide below will help with snagging the first one and we’ll continue to update as we unlock the rest. Unlocking these styles can be a little tricky.
Anomaly at weeping woods skin#
Other items – like the styles associated with the new Agent Jones skin – act as quest rewards. Season 6’s Battle Pass offers an assortment of cosmetic items, most of which are made available through continuous play. With it comes new primal elements, changes to the island, and of course, a new Battle Pass. This is fine and I often add a bit of Japan Drier to my own blends.Fortnite Chapter 2, Season 6 is finally here. Your product states quick drying which probably just means it contains metallic driers to speed the process. I assume from your link that you are in the UK where it is a but damp. Variables in air temp and moisture effect this. In ideal conditions oil blends take 12 to 24 hours to dry. As you (and I) have learned it takes less time to wait till a coat is "ready" for the next coat than to go back and try to repair. If that means 4 return visits at 1 hour intervals to eliminate weeping, that's what it means. Once you get the entire surface evenly wet (view with raking light for easier dry spot detection) you would generally wait 15 minutes or so and then wipe ALL the excess off. Evenness is what you are after in contrast to thickness of application at the first stage. You may find that you reapply to certain areas many more times than other areas. When using these products I would apply lighter coats.

Another anomaly of wipe on finishes is that some areas of the wood soak up more than others so multiple thin coats are required to reach an even absorption and appearance. If there was uncured finish that got trapped somehow, that may be what you are seeing. Red oak can weep for days if heavily flooded.

The cure is to keep wiping them off until they stop. This is oil coming up from the pores after a flooding sort of step in finishing. What I am seeing after sanding is the oil coming back up to the surface from below…how do I combat that?
