James Dalgety is the sort of gentleman that you
instinctively want to trust, so when he gives you an exchange puzzle and describes
it as rather trivial and says you really ought to be able to put the pieces
making up a cube into the frame in under a minute – “One Minute Puzzle In Cube”
anyone – you want to take him at his word…
That was my first mistake…
…heck I’d settle for under ten minutes! And be proud of
that!
…so I failed – awfully…
… because the frame is squished and the entry holes are off
centre – not because I’m a rubbish solver, dear reader, but for all of the
reasons above… or that’s my story!
Had I not tried to beat the clock, I might have approached
it sensibly, studied the pieces and come up with a sensible strategy, observed
the holes more carefully and decided which were likely to be most limiting and
require particular pieces, and then only, begin to place the pieces in their
final spots, adjusting for any estimation errors along the way – then I might
have stood a chance of doing it quickly…
…and if you did solve this one quickly, then I doff my cap
to you, gentle puzzler…
…but in the mean time I’m going to carry on muttering to
myself under my breath about that man Dalgety! He caught me hook, line and
sinkers…
... If it was a much darker colour, this could well be the very first expressionist puzzle cube ever!!
ReplyDeleteLionel