I won’t bother introducing this
blog post by saying, yet again, that whenever Robert Yarger offers me a copy of
his latest creation I don’t spend much time considering the options, I just
send him the money, because I suspect that’s how most of them usually start - I
don’t often read my blog, but I suspect that’s accurate.
Let’s just start with the puzzle
itself this time - it is big, and there’s clearly stuff moving, nay, rattling
around inside... this has scared a few puzzlers concerned that their latest
prize may be damaged... rest assured, it ain’t, it just comes with some spare
parts(!). (More on that later!)
The introductory notes for this
puzzle tell you that it has a few challenges, with potentially more to follow
in the future. Your first task is to simply open the box... which might be a
lot simpler if the Stick-meister hadn’t built a rather complicated mechanism
into the lid that would appear to have it trapped rather firmly shut.
Experimenting with the various
elements of the contraption is fun, and it slowly yields an improving
understanding of how the various bits and bobs interact - some of which is
visible, and some of which needs to be deduced. Once that gets clearer, you can
start working out how the lid is actually locked up and what you might need to
do to free it... bearing in mind that there’s probably going to be a useful and
a less useful order for attacking things in.
Get the lid open and you’re
greeted with a bag of bits and a screwdriver... and a much larger challenge!
Rob’s intention at this point is
for puzzlers to use the new bits and pieces, and most of the old ones, to
construct a new locking mechanism on the lid... and he admits that’s a pretty
serious challenge... one I did not manage! (And in my defense, most of my mates
with a copy didn’t either!)
The usual solution booklet
includes complete instructions for assembling the alternate challenge, and also
note that in assembling it, you actually still won’t necessarily know how to
solve the next challenge - which was enough encouragement for me to peek into
the instructions and assemble my next challenge.... and it’s true: you can
assemble it and still not know how the heck to unlock it all. (You’re
effectively screwing it all together in a locked state and not using the
mechanism at all...)
Solving the second challenge is
just as much fun as the first, if not more, given that you’ve built it and still
don’t even understand it!
It is complicated and a little
bonkers, but you have to love the idea of a do-it-yourself puzzlebox,
especially one from the Stick-meister!
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