 Pocket had been 
entered in the 2018 Nob Yoshigahara Puzzle Design Competition but I 
hadn’t been able to have a bash at it in San Diego – so when I saw a 
copy in one of Wil’s crates I pounced on it. Designed by Koichi Miura and MINE, my
 copy came with two sets of pieces, each of which needs to be inserted 
into the tray through the slot at the top… which holds the only little 
wrinkle: a single obstructing voxel.
Pocket had been 
entered in the 2018 Nob Yoshigahara Puzzle Design Competition but I 
hadn’t been able to have a bash at it in San Diego – so when I saw a 
copy in one of Wil’s crates I pounced on it. Designed by Koichi Miura and MINE, my
 copy came with two sets of pieces, each of which needs to be inserted 
into the tray through the slot at the top… which holds the only little 
wrinkle: a single obstructing voxel.
The two sets of pieces 
appear to be a beginner’s puzzle and a slightly more advanced puzzle – 
with the beginner’s pieces all being made up of two pairs of blocky 
pieces (C’s and P’s – both hexominoes) and a little
 playing will convince you that there’s probably only really one way to 
arrange all of those pieces in the tray, so the puzzle reduces to 
finding a way to get them in there… as I said, I think this is the 
beginner’s challenge – in fact, it wasn’t even used
 in the Design Competition.
 The second set of 
pieces provides a slightly trickier challenge: all four pieces are 
different and they all have 45 degree corners / cut-outs… which makes 
for a lot of interesting ways to combine them in the
 shape and size of the tray provided… sadly, however, most of those 
arrangements are precluded by that one, pesky little voxel sitting in 
the centre of the top slot… I should know, as I spent an awfully long 
time trying various arrangements that turned out
 to be un-assembleable. (It IS a word, now!). Finding the one that does 
work is quite a treat – it definitely rewards the solver in a delightful
 manner.
The second set of 
pieces provides a slightly trickier challenge: all four pieces are 
different and they all have 45 degree corners / cut-outs… which makes 
for a lot of interesting ways to combine them in the
 shape and size of the tray provided… sadly, however, most of those 
arrangements are precluded by that one, pesky little voxel sitting in 
the centre of the top slot… I should know, as I spent an awfully long 
time trying various arrangements that turned out
 to be un-assembleable. (It IS a word, now!). Finding the one that does 
work is quite a treat – it definitely rewards the solver in a delightful
 manner.
I hadn’t ever seen or heard about
Packing Puzzle 4P until I stumbled across it at Peter’s place – I
 did recognise the designer’s name -  Hajime Katsumoto – and I have 
rather enjoyed a few of his other designs, so I took a punt and I ended 
up being rather glad I did.
 There’s a two-sided 
tray, helpfully titled “Puzzle 1” and “Puzzle 2” and a set of four 
P-pentominoes… it’s pretty clear from the get-go that you need to put 
the four pieces into each of the (slightly obstructed)
 4 * 5 frames. The holes on the first side are big enough to allow 
pieces to be inserted either way up, which is helpful… and you can 
fiddle around for a while and realise that you’re going to need to be a 
little creative in order to find a solution to this
 one… it’s quite a cute little solution and gives a nice little “A-Ha!” 
moment.
There’s a two-sided 
tray, helpfully titled “Puzzle 1” and “Puzzle 2” and a set of four 
P-pentominoes… it’s pretty clear from the get-go that you need to put 
the four pieces into each of the (slightly obstructed)
 4 * 5 frames. The holes on the first side are big enough to allow 
pieces to be inserted either way up, which is helpful… and you can 
fiddle around for a while and realise that you’re going to need to be a 
little creative in order to find a solution to this
 one… it’s quite a cute little solution and gives a nice little “A-Ha!” 
moment. 
 Puzzle 2 on the other 
hand is a bit of a sod – it kept me going for a lot longer! The holes on
 the second side are 5 voxels and P-shaped – so you can simply drop in 
the last two pieces, right?! Fine… all you
 need to do is position the first two pieces correctly and you’re done… 
except you can’t!  I spent ages trying variations on a theme, doing 
things this way and then that, and every single time I ended up with the
 same conclusion – it doesn’t work! Unless I
 can get one piece to magically pass THROUGH the other, they ain’t 
getting into the position I want them to be in…
Puzzle 2 on the other 
hand is a bit of a sod – it kept me going for a lot longer! The holes on
 the second side are 5 voxels and P-shaped – so you can simply drop in 
the last two pieces, right?! Fine… all you
 need to do is position the first two pieces correctly and you’re done… 
except you can’t!  I spent ages trying variations on a theme, doing 
things this way and then that, and every single time I ended up with the
 same conclusion – it doesn’t work! Unless I
 can get one piece to magically pass THROUGH the other, they ain’t 
getting into the position I want them to be in…
Desperation led me to 
resort to Think(C)ing (it’s been a while!) and then even to consider 
CHEATing – although I did manage to stop myself just short of doing that
 when I realised I wouldn’t actually be able
 to UNDO the thing I was about to DO… until the right little briefest 
flash of inspiration struck and seconds later side 2 was solved – love 
it!
The last puzzle in this
 post turned out to be my first and second prize for A2P2 – each year my
 competition winners are invariably puzzle collectors who already “have 
everything” – so finding a puzzle they haven’t
 got turns into an annual conundrum for me… with Wil Strijbos invariably
 managing to turn up something SO NEW that nobody could possibly have a 
copy yet –
Framed Jigsaw was that puzzle this year. 
 The original design 
comes courtesy of Hajime Katsumoto (yes there’s a spelling mistake on 
the puzzle... sorry) but it’s been “Streetwise’d” and “JCC’d” resulting 
in the improved version here – the pic shows the
 starting position with what appears to be a nicely checkered set of 
jigsaw pieces under a partial clear frame – with a central 2*2 hole… 
almost fully constructed – except for the final piece that obviously(!?) 
belongs in the top right hand corner – is the wrong
 colour for a neat checkerboard pattern, and has a tongue and a groove too many… which is odd.
The original design 
comes courtesy of Hajime Katsumoto (yes there’s a spelling mistake on 
the puzzle... sorry) but it’s been “Streetwise’d” and “JCC’d” resulting 
in the improved version here – the pic shows the
 starting position with what appears to be a nicely checkered set of 
jigsaw pieces under a partial clear frame – with a central 2*2 hole… 
almost fully constructed – except for the final piece that obviously(!?) 
belongs in the top right hand corner – is the wrong
 colour for a neat checkerboard pattern, and has a tongue and a groove too many… which is odd. 
Removing the pieces 
tells you a lot about how interesting this puzzle is going to be… a 
piece come out easily, but then you need to start moving things around 
to get the rest of the pieces out: the central opening
 is big enough for the 2*2 pieces, but not big enough for any tongues 
projecting outwards… so you need to manoeuvre pieces to be fully in the 
open frame in order to remove them – taking things out at an angle 
relative to the tray, isn’t possible at all…
Get all the pieces out 
and some things become apparent, like all tongues fit all grooves – and 
there are the same (ergo just enough) number of each…which is great: it 
means there are LOTS of ways of constructing
 a 4*4 square with those pieces.
How many of those do you think are assembleable (yup, still a word! Work with me here…)?
Very, very few!
You need to be able to 
keep as many degrees of freedom available as you progress or you’ll find
 yourself up a blind alley that simply won’t allow the last couple of 
pieces to be inserted… and let me tell you
 that I found a LOT of ways of almost doing this one…there is a solution
 to be found, and I found it quite tough – Nick on the other hand seemed
 to solve it rather rapidly, and I’m not sure how Ali’s doing/done… at 
least I know it wasn’t trivial! :-) 
 
Hey, they look very nice!
ReplyDeleteIs there any way to get these puzzles? ;)
Thanks
Yes, where can I find these....Framed Jigsaw looks like a great follow-up to Jigsaw 29
ReplyDelete...you could try William Strijbos, or one of the Japanese puzzle shops (Puzzle of MINE or Torito) - but you will probably need to use a Japanese re-shipper in the case of the Japanese shops.
ReplyDeletepuzzle of MINE or Torito: none have them ;)
ReplyDeleteAllard, thank you for the "hint" for the solution of problem 2 for the 4P-Puzzle. I was also fiddeling with this side for many times, found all positions but nothing worked. When I was reading your comment about that puzzle it also flashed me and I´ve got it. Brilliant solution for a "impossible" problem.
ReplyDeleteHendrik
;-)
Delete