This week, dear reader (for there can surely only be one!) I
bring you thoughts on a most excellent little set of puzzles – the Minima
Series, designed by Frederic Boucher and made by NothingYetDesigns.
I missed out on these when they were initially put up for
sale (in my defence they didn’t last long!) so I was very chuffed when I
spotted a set on Puzzle Paradise at a reasonable price. One or two of my
puzzling mates had said some encouraging things about them so I was intrigued.
NYD have done a great job of making up the boxes in frosted acrylic
– all neatly marked with their appropriate identifiers. The pieces are all in
their own little drawstring bags and there’s an instruction card for each of
the dozen little terrors. Most of the instructions just ask you to place all of
the pieces inside the box and remind you that rotations are allowed. (A couple
of the later puzzles impose some restrictions on where certain coloured blocks need
to be placed.)
Diving right in, I figured I’d start at number one because,
clearly, that would be the easiest one, right?
M1 has just three pieces to be placed inside the 2*2*3 box
(the boxes are all 2*2*3 – it’s just the openings that differ between them) –
the pieces take up 11 voxels so we have one spare voxel inside the box when we’re
done… given the shape of the openings, there’s literally only one place those
pieces can be inserted, sure there are a couple of places where a bit can be
temporarily parked outside the box, but they’re all going in through that single
little opening…
I end up spending some time thinking (literally) outside the
box while exploring the different assemblies that
might fit inside the
box, and then trying to reverse pieces out of the way using the imaginary holes
in the right places… that doesn’t immediately lead to a suitable solution so I
go back inside the box and begin exploring all of the potential rotations that
might be possible with that combination of holes… and then some pennies start
dropping… and M1’s solved.
A brief break to enjoy a little dopamine hit (hey, I’ve got
to take all I can get, this solving thing doesn’t happen that frequently!) and
I’m onto M2…
I make steady, albeit slow progress until I get to M4 which
proves to be a bit of a blocker for me… but that’s nothing like M8, it turns
out – that one keeps me thoroughly stumped for a long time – and it remains the
only one in the series that I haven’t solved for weeks.
You’d think things might get a little samey after the first
half dozen or so – but they don’t – Frederic’s put together an excellent set of
challenges that never gets predictable – to the point that going back to the
start again a week or two after you’ve solved the lot of them will still
provide some amusement – and in my case – another serious challenge.
I really love this set of puzzles, and so far, everyone I’ve
inflicted them on has had the same reaction: “How the heck can this simple
little thing be that difficult?”