...new tray-packing puzzles.
I’ve mentioned all three of these puzzles in various blog
posts over the past three or four months but I thought they really deserved a
post on their own, so here goes!
Yuu Asaka’s Jigsaw Puzzle 29 was entered in the 2018 Nob Yoshigahara
Puzzle Design Competition… and I didn’t
play with it once. In my defence, I was fairly busy at IPP38, but the fact
remains, I didn’t let it draw me gently in and punch me in the stomach… that
came later, when my Dutch mate gave me a copy for my birthday a month or so later…
I did the classic mechanical puzzler thing and commented on the fact that it
was a jigsaw puzzle – missing the ‘29’ reference entirely but he grinned and
said I’d like it… and he’s never been wrong yet!
So I started playing with it – first thing I noticed is
the corners – you always start with the corners, don’t you… it’s a square frame
so there are four corners… always. Except this time. Jigsaw 29 has more – which
is interesting, to quote an old friend.
Try coming up with an edge and you find that it’s either too
long or too short – and when you FINALLY come up with a couple of edges, you
find yourself running rather low on edge pieces, which is probably going to
make constructing the remaining two sides rather tricky…
This puzzle gives you a fabulous roller coaster ride from having
no suspicion that anything strange is afoot, to thinking this is pretty weird,
to “Hey I can do this” only to be followed by “Aw nawwwww” and somewhere in between
all that, thinking to yourself that this is a square puzzle… but there are 29
pieces, which isn’t usually a square number.
I like ‘29’ as the introduction to this set of puzzles… it
looks almost normal and let’s you think that your usual strategies for solving
jigsaws should suffice… until they don’t.
Next up is Jigsaw Puzzle 19… a gift from Kevin - Thanks mate!
If 29 suckered you in gently, then 19 sits
up and yells at you, telling you “You don’t know nuttin' ” right from the
get-go! You see, whereas 29 has an extra corner, 19 consists only of corner
pieces… 19 of them – and there’s that whole 19 isn’t a square number thing
again – but the frame is square…
You’ll pretty quickly find that your standard jigsaw solving
tools aren’t going to be very useful at all here… again the pieces are
transparent with no top or bottom and starting at the corners, filling in the
edges and then completing the middle clearly isn’t going to be a simple task of
sorting the pieces appropriately.
This one really requires some thought and a fair amount of
jettisoning what you think you know about jigsaw puzzles…
Wave 7 is a little different – seven simple wave-shaped
pieces come with a neat little rectangular tray. Six of those pieces will fit
into the tray rather simply – but the seventh will invariably refuse point blank
to go in… no matter how carefully you match up the dents to the bumps, the
remaining gap is pretty much always just the wrong shape: there’s always a bump
where you need a gap.
But that’s OK, ‘cos we’re puzzlers – we don’t always expect
fair play, so we start exploring the potential tricks – and interestingly the
tray’s geometry looks quite fair – at least in the Stew Coffin sense of fairness…
trying those sort of tricks results only in greater embarrassment.
The solution, it turns out, is very cute and has taken almost
every puzzler I know a lot longer than seven simple little pieces should ever
really take a proper puzzler… this one starts and ends as a simple “pack seven
pieces into a tray” challenge and doesn’t have all the wonderful jigsaw subterfuge
of the other two, but it’s definitely an excellent design…
I hope we see a lot more from Yuu Asaka in the future!
…and best of all? They’re all still freely available direct from
the designer, who’s on FaceBook. Look him up!