Robrecht Louage entered his 1 € Labyrinth Puzzle in this
year’s Nob Yoshigahara Puzzle Design Competition and my first encounter with it
was in the Design Competition room – where it kicked my behind rather
soundly. I had a couple of attempts at
it there and failed miserably each time, so when I got back home I made sure I
ordered a copy from Wil Strijbos.
The 1 € Labyrinth looks like a classic hidden maze puzzle –
there’s a little keyhole-shaped window allowing you a tantalizing peek into a
maze milled into the base sheet of wood. The clear sheet of acrylic has a hole
drilled in it that carries the one Euro coin ... so you can see it riding in
and out and even touch it through the window, but until you find your way out
of the maze, that coin is well and truly trapped. The maze is effectively
created by the interaction between the horizontal slots milled into the wooden
base and a vertical channel milled into the clear slider as a ball bearing
trapped between the slider and the base moves between those channels.
Tilting the ball bearing up and down while moving the
acrylic sheet left and right should enable you to navigate through the internal
maze ... through to some point where presumably the trapped one Euro coin will
match up to the right hand edge of the keyhole, releasing the coin...
Well, that was my theory...
The peep hole shows you three or four lines of the internal
maze – enough to give you a fairly good idea of the workings and get you
started. You’ll find a couple of areas to explore soon enough and pretty soon
you’ll be drawing a mental map of the likely layout inside the invisible sections
of the maze. I managed to get a fairly decent mental picture of virtually the
whole of the maze, yet I couldn’t find a suitable exit...
And that was where it caught me for quite a while... I was
pretty certain I’d narrowed it down to two potential areas that should be
interesting, but it wouldn’t open for me ... until I thought a little about the
designer, and some of his earlier designs ... and then it opened in seconds –
with a great little “A-Ha!” moment.
Robrecht came along to the Dutch Cube Day and had a table
set up selling most of his designs at very reasonable prices, and it was great
to be able to chat to him briefly (via his son's interpreting skills!) about his designs (Four Steps Visible Lock is
still my favourite!) and to tell him how 1 € Labyrinth had totally fooled me
until I thought about who’d designed it... :-)
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