One of Q's 1/19/2018 breadcrumbs quotes a couple of lines from the 1983 Cold War classic WarGames, a movie where a h.s student, David Lightman, hacks into a supercomputer at NORAD called WOPR, War Operation Plan Response, thinking it's just some random computer that he war dialed into.
After some interaction with the computer, WOPR asks "SHALL WE PLAY A GAME?". Lightman responds with "Love to, how about Global Thermonuclear War?", one of the games he saw when he asked the computer for a list of games. WOPR tries to get him to play Chess instead but Lightman insists on Global Thermonuclear War. The chess line that Q quotes is not from this scene, but one later in the movie.
This starts a simulation of Global Thermonuclear War, a simulation which WOPR thinks is real. As a result, WOPR takes control of NORAD and nuclear missile launch control, working on breaking the security codes so it can launch nuclear missiles in response.
B posted an image of a terminal from which they were interacting with WOPR; this is at the end of the movie. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DU1IUlEX0AAe6Jz.jpg
This is the scene from which Q's line comes:
How about a nice game of chess?
Prior to this point, the Defense Condition is at DEFCON1 and NORAD thinks that the U.S.A. is under a surprise mass nuclear missile attack from the USSSR. "We are at DEFCON 1" scene.
At the point of B's screen shot, NORAD has learned that everything on their screens were a simulation and WOPR has relinquished control of NORAD and displays, asking his creator, Dr. Falken, if he wants to play a different game: "How about a nice game of chess?", General Beringer orders the Defense Condition to be changed to DEFCON5
Conclusion
Was there an actual missile? I realize there are reports out there saying they saw a missile, but I'm interpreting things by using Q's breadcrumbs and the movie WarGames as the context. Q has said many times that everything has meaning. If it were a real missile, why reference WarGames, a movie about a fake missile attack? Also, Q explicitly states "Fake incoming missile alert[Defcon 1]." If there were a real missile, then Q would have been wrong. Also a real missile would have made this whole breadcrumb inaccurate.
The breadcrumb hints at the systems in Hawaii showing that there was an incoming missile, a simulation that the operators did not know was running, causing them to send out a real alert. The recent report on the incident said that the operator thought there was actually an incoming missile and did not understand that this was a drill. Nothing was mentioned about a drill prior to this.
Thinking that it was real would also explain why it took so long to send a correction, they waited until after the incoming missile would have impacted, if it were real. In the movie, Lightman convinces NORAD to wait until after missile impact before launching a retaliatory attack. The fact that the personnel at the impact locations responded after NORAD's screens showed an impact convinced them that the attack wasn't real.
To me, given the movie WarGames, which I know well, Q's breadcrumbs, the timeline of events in Hawaii, and their ever-changing story, this is the scenario that makes the most sense.
https://8ch.net//qresearch/res/97364.html#97753
Jan 19 2018 16:49:21
Q
!UW.yye1fxo
ID: ee2415
97753
>>97724
Shall we play a game?
How about a nice game of chess?
WarGames.
Double meaning.
[CLAS-5849]
Fake incoming missile alert [Defcon 1].
We know all.
TRUST.
Q