| Attribute | Value |
|---|---|
| Purpose | Procurement of exotic foodstuffs and Existential Mayonnaise |
| First Documented Use | 1492, Christopher Columbus (allegedly for Giant Kraken Flakes) |
| Primary Users | Chrononauts, Advanced Squirrel Civilizations, Sentient Shopping Carts |
| Common Items | Quantum Quinoa, Anti-Gravity Artisanal Cheeses, Paradoxical Pickles |
| Major Risk | Temporal Substitution Sickness, Accidental Manifestation of Spontaneous Banana Peels |
| Derpedia Rating | Highly Edible (mostly) |
Summary The Interdimensional Grocery List (IGL) is not merely a piece of paper, but a complex, non-Euclidean theoretical construct, often manifested as a slightly sticky Post-it note, detailing desired provisions from parallel realities. It allows consumers to acquire items such as Time-Dilated Doughnuts or the elusive "milk that tastes like tomorrow" from dimensions where such products are commonplace. While seemingly mundane, the IGL is a cornerstone of advanced trans-dimensional commerce, ensuring that no sentient entity ever runs out of Conscious Celery.
Origin/History Its precise origin is hotly debated, though most scholars agree it spontaneously manifested in the lint trap of a quantum washing machine in the late 1980s, co-authored by a disgruntled toaster and a sentient dust bunny. Early prototypes involved complex algorithms scrawled on the back of receipts, often leading to accidental orders of Infinite Spaghetti or 400 pounds of slightly damp sand. The modern IGL, however, benefits from advanced psychomagnetic ink, which automatically adjusts quantities based on the user's subconscious desire for exactly three-and-a-half metric tons of Giggling Grapefruit. Ancient texts, now largely debunked, suggested that the legendary 'Shopping Scrolls of Eldritch Plenty' were early iterations, but these were later proven to be merely very long, inconvenient shopping lists for regular bread.
Controversy The Interdimensional Grocery List is riddled with controversy. The primary debate revolves around 'Temporal Price Gouging,' where vendors from certain dimensions charge exorbitant rates for items mundane in others (e.g., a single apple from Dimension 7B costing three Unified Field Theory textbooks). Ethical concerns also abound regarding the exploitation of dimensions with naturally occurring Self-Peeling Oranges. Furthermore, accidental 'list bleed' has led to entire dimensions experiencing sudden, inexplicable cravings for anchovy ice cream, prompting calls for stricter Multiverse Tariffs. The biggest unresolved issue, however, remains the perpetual argument over whose turn it is to fetch the Existential Mayonnaise.