[Yup - SPOILERS!]
I guess it’s traditional for me to explain my Christmas
puzzle round about now, so here goes…
This year’s puzzle was a bit different – for one thing, you
actually had to do some work before you even got hold of the real puzzle, but
in my defence, I did try and leave some breadcrumbs!
First of all there was the colourful text – that was quite
unusual for my blog… and then there were some stray bits of capitalisation – collect
all the unexpected capitals and you were told to “LOOK CLOSER”… which
considered with the colours was leading you to look at the blog text – where each
para had some stray text after it in white on white – which is either visible
when highlighted or if you’re looking at the page source code… that resolves to
“bit.ly/allard25122021” and if you pop that into a browser you’ll find yourself
looking at a vaguely familiar format for my Christmas Puzzles..
That gives you instructions ("I want a three digit number") and some clues in the form of text and pictures… the flavourtext gives some helpful clues referring to “times”, “competitive”
and “initially” … and if you look VERY closely at the bottom right of the frame
around the pics you’ll see some text saying “Thanks Nick & John”. Hopefully
you’ll recognise a couple of the puzzles among the sixteen and realise they’ve
all been entries in the annual Puzzle Design Competition (latterly the Nob
Yoshigahara Puzzle Design Competition) which is run by Nick Baxter and hosted
on John Rausch’s website… which makes sense of the “competitive” reference and
the “Thanks Nick & John” note.
Now you’re in the familiar territory of having to find data
points on all of the puzzles in the grid, which you can do by using the search
functionality on John’s website – if you put in blank search parameters it will
list all of the entries by year…
If you start doing this and work your way through the
grid you’ll notice that they’re almost perfectly in alphabetical order, perhaps
except for the first entry if you didn’t use it’s full name… which is “(Now
they know how many holes it takes to fill) The L-Bert Hall”. If you list all
the puzzle names and the years they entered (“times” :-) ), you’ll notice that the
entry years are unique, which is handy and provides a natural order, which can’t
be a coincidence. [Orientation of the pics was just me being a b@stard!]
Ordering the puzzle names by entry year and focusing just on
the first letters (“initially”) provides the following text: “WELLDONEBURRMUDA”,
or if you add a few spaces “WELL DONE BURRMUDA”. Hopefully the “WELL DONE” bit
gave you some confidence that you were on the right track… then you just needed
to work out how to get a three-digit number out of that… and hopefully it wasn’t
too much of a stretch to realise that Burrmuda was a Stewart Coffin design (and not a country) and he always
gives his designs a number – Burrmuda happened to be 112, which in turn happens to be a
three-digit number, the final confirmer.
Massive congratulations to Brendan Perez who was the first person
to crack my puzzle in just under 12 hours from publication, while navigating Christmas duties! Around
four hours later he was joined on the podium by Steve Canfield (who went to a
lot more trouble than I’ve ever gone to for his first Christmas puzzle – check it out!). The final spot on the podium was taken by Mike Quigley later on Boxing
Day morning, with Steve Nicholls hot on his heels (possibly due to some
collaborative work there). Amy and Josh were the final two solvers later on
boxing Day and then we’ve had no more people solve it since then… so you should
all consider yourselves a rarefied bunch of puzzlers – well done! And thanks
for playing along!!
Some goodies from my drawer of swaps will be heading out to
the first three places shortly.
[Thanks to Nick & John for providing the fodder for the
hunt and to Nick for checking my work.]
The list of puzzles for anyone who’s interested, in order of
entry year:
- Walk of
Ladybird
- Edge
Corner Cube
- Loris
- Little
Maze N’ Cubes
- Dipole
Dilemma
- Othogenesis
- (Now
they know how many holes it takes to fill) The L-Bert Hall
- Easy
Eight, Hard Eight
- Barb’s
Cube
- UFO
- Road
Blocks
- Rising
Sun
- Moulin
Rouge
- Unicum
- Double Cube
- Axes and
Hammer
Fun fact: I hadn't intended or even realised that the puzzles were pretty much in alphabetical order in the grid - and only when someone pointed it out did I realise that it was the result of InDesign's 'Place' function - when you place a bunch of selected files in one go, they go in alphabetically by filename - and I had the puzzle names at the start of the filenames.