The term "Mola Errata List" most commonly refers to the official correction sheet for the Manual of Laboratory Animals (often abbreviated as MOLA), a standard reference work in laboratory animal science and veterinary medicine. However, in broader project management or technical documentation contexts, it can refer to any list of errors and corrections associated with a document, codebase, or dataset named "Mola."
At the end of the game, the player with the heaviest Mola wins.
These are not errors in the text, but rather rules that are frequently misinterpreted or missed entirely during initial playthroughs.
A turtle motif must have an uncracked, geometric shell. If the appliqué lines show a "crack" (deliberate or accidental) in the shell design, it symbolizes a fractured journey to the afterlife. These are frequently sold as "practice molas" but appear on every Errata List as culturally non-functional.
Since the 1990s, Guna women have increasingly used pre-printed commercial fabrics (often from China or the US) as their base layer. The Mola Errata List specifically tracks errors in these printed materials.