Showing posts with label Wil Strijbos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wil Strijbos. Show all posts

Saturday, 23 August 2025

Twins Box

Anyone with an interest in Wil Strijbos’ puzzle boxes will know that he’s been working on the follow-up to his super-fun Angel Box for a while now – we were talking about the project back in 2017 and already back then the traditional backstory had taken shape. It’s a classic Strijbos-story that ties into his Angel Box where he chances upon twin daughters in the Ikebukuro branch of Tokyo Hands. If you’re on his mailing list, you’ve seen the story, and if you have an Angel Box, then Wil’s probably already been in touch to offer you a Twins Box – for the first 100 copies produced he’s giving Angel Box owners first refusal on their edition number – some collectors really like that!

Development of the puzzle has sadly been delayed over the years, not least as a result of the significant Covid-era travel bans which stopped Wil from visiting Tom to work on the design and manufacture. With things slowly getting back to normal, and being able to get a few other projects out of the way, attention returned to the Twins Box and just before the last MPP Wil let me know that my copy was ready for shipping – I opted to wait for personal delivery over commercial courier given this thing weighs over 5kg… it’s invariably going to get dropped somewhere in the shipping chain and no matter how good the packaging, there’s a chance it’s going to get a little dinged.

In the end the Dutch contingent came across with an extra 11kg in their hand luggage in order to make a couple of us very happy puzzlers. Wil handed over my big beautiful lump on the Friday evening and I left it wrapped up on the dining room sideboard until Sunday when I got a chance to play…

On the Saturday, Wil gave Ali his copy and it ended up being placed in various spots around the hall so we could have it in shot for a few of the MPP pics without anyone actually interacting with it, just for a laugh: here’s one of the most eagerly awaited puzzles just lying around with no-one playing with it – childish, I know! :-) [Kudos to Matt W who I think was the first one to spot it and ask what it was!]

I got to play with my copy on the Sunday and it’s an absolute beast – you’re going to play with this one on a table, period, so Wil’s thoughtfully provided a protective cloth and board to stop you damaging both your nicely finished shiny puzzle, and the table that you’re playing on…

There are a couple of interesting little windows and holes around the box… one of which appears to have a little girl peering through it begging you to save her -  no sight of her sister, mind - and on one end there’s the famous “Hers” keyholders that Wil’s been trying to source from around the world over the past few years – it’s good to see where that’s been used after years of scouring shops for copies of these suckers. It comes with a keyring and a couple of keys that both fit in said “Hers” keyholder – they turn, but don’t seem to do anything…

The first series of moves are wonderfully novel – I’ve never seen anything like them before! When things get going there are some amusing discoveries and even some alarming discoveries… while I’m playing on the Sunday afternoon Wil is casting an occasional eye in my direction to observe the progress and he seems happy until I begin to start asking silly questions – for the record “Don’t drop things into holes unless you KNOW that you can control them!” – (I‘d run out of good ideas, in my defence…)

I make a reasonable amount of progress, free my first twin and then find myself somewhat stuck…

…and there I remain for a couple of weeks (including a period of virtually no puzzling while I focused on upgrading my Prusa puzzle-maker) until Louis encouraged me to try something again – something I was pretty sure I’d tried many times already and at first it seemed to do the same (no)thing that it had before, but then something changed and I was moving again…

From there another delightful puzzling journey ensued with a further slew of new mechanisms to identify and defeat. The second half has another unique concept that I haven’t seen in a puzzle before… the progression is pretty positive through to the final compartment where the second twin is released. HUZZAH!

It’s great to see this puzzle in the flesh after at least(!) 8 years in gestation – it’s another classic Strijbos sequential discovery with several brand-new puzzle mechanisms to discover and defeat. (I have huge respect for folks like Wil who can see everyday items and then picture them in the midst of a puzzle providing a surprising challenge – and then actually bringing it all to life as well.)

It’s big. It’s heavy. And it’s expensive… but I’m very chuffed to have the Twins next to my Angel Box. I expect everyone who ends up playing with it is going to get a massive kick out of it!

Thanks Wil for carrying it over to me! Awesome service and a(nother) fantastic puzzle in the Strijbos series! 

 

Sunday, 4 May 2025

Kings Day 2025

This year the Two Brass Monkeys invite me to travel over to Eindhoven and Venlo with them, so I head down to Ali’s place on Friday morning. My sat-nag takes me around a bit of a roundabout route, but it does keep me out of any rush-hour traffic, which is great. I get to Ali’s at pretty much the appointed time (albeit we’ve decided at the last minute to bring our departure forward an hour or so, and that turned out to be a good decision!) and it doesn’t take long to load up the trick and head down toward Folkestone.

Getting onto Le Shuttle is super-efficient, with trained seagulls checking our tickets. The trip under the channel is an opportunity to stretch our legs and have some snacks on the tailgate. Heading out into France, Steve and I keep reminding Ali to drive on the wrong side of the road and asking if we’re nearly there yet. We stop for a mid-afternoon lunch at a roadside Belgian Burger King and we chew up the miles pretty ruthlessly until we hit the outskirts of Antwerp where we find traffic that will end up delaying us for around an hour or more. My job of supplying snacks to the driver and up-front passenger becomes crucial at this stage.

After we clear Antwerp, the roads open up again, but by now we’re later than we’d hoped to be, and we’re rearranging the evening plans with Louis…we manage to get to Louis’ place in time to say hello and grab a quick drink before heading out to our Friday evening escape room in Oisterwiijk.

We all get dressed up like merry woodsmen and somehow resist the urge to launch into a rousing rendition of “I’m a lumberjack and I’m OK!”. It’s an interesting room where the first section made us toil for quite a while until we (OK, Louis!) spotted some tiny details… that helped us make significant progress before heading into the second area which felt more tractable (i.e. suited our “Let’s just try this”-style) – the mechanics for opening the third area surprised us all and we found we had a heck of a lot to do in the final area – so that ended up being quite a rush... with quite a few nudges we just managed to get though everything in time. We reckoned it was a pretty good room -with some really surprising mechanics along the way.

Back at Louis’ place plenty of puzzling ensued – I know – shocker! Somewhere around midnight we call it a day and head off to check into the hotel.

Next morning I meet the monkeys for breakfast before Louis and Mieke collect us to take us bargain-hunting at the King’s Day flea markets, resplendent in our obligatory orange polo shirts. We get a lot of steps in wandering around viewing the various treasures for sale. We fail to find any Stickmen, Lensch or Toulouzas treasures. Ali does manage to find a 3x3 Mastermorphix(?) and against our better judgment he buys it for a euro. (In fairness it provides way more than a euro’s entertainment over the rest of the weekend!) Steve manages to find an absolute treasure of a vintage Swine Dissection (SD) puzzle and duly sends in the A-Team to negotiate the purchase – Louis and Mieke secure the pièce de resistance and the team of travelling puzzlers celebrated!

We grab a bite to eat at a café before heading off to the next flea market, where sadly zero Tom Lensches or Swine Dissections are discovered... so we head back to Louis’ for some more puzzling.

I’d taken over a few of my latest Pelikan acquisitions which were duly passed around – Girish’s Heavy Lifter gets several nods of approval, Frederic’s Sym Duo puts smiles on everyone’s faces and I enjoy (finally) solving a couple of Mine’s latest assemblies.

I’d printed off a few copies of Steve’s Smells of Roses (where the heck do these names come from!?) so Louis made short work of assembling that, and in fact running through all of the Pelikans I’d taken over. Knowing I’ve been getting nowhere on my RaDio, he suggests I have a bash on his, and after some subtle questioning, he coaxes me into doing the right thing and the puzzle comes alive for me in a totally unexpected manner – it is magical.

Late afternoon we head off to our second escape room at Hotel Veloria (IYK,YK) – we grab a drink in the hotel bar before being ushered into the Reception area and then head into the room… which I’m not going to say much about, because the element of continual surprise is just incredible. The theming throughout is literally perfect and the mechanics are jaw-dropping! It’s easy to see why this one has consistently scored well in the TERPECA league tables ever since it opened in 2017(!). It’s worth going (well) out of your way to visit this one!

We head back to Louis’ place via Dominos to collect some pizzas. Louis refused to accept any contributions toward either the room or the pizzas, so we left a random sum of cash in the glovebox for someone to find.

We spent an hour or two trying to get into Pavel's "What is the name of this puzzle?" and failed miserably... Yet more puzzling, with some actual solving, ensues until we decide to call it a day at around midnight.

Breakfast with Steve and Ali is always fun and Louis collects us to take us through to Wil’s place where we find our genial host putting the final touches on his arrangements. We’re welcomed like long-lost friends and we take the opportunity to foist gifts on our host before the rest of the gaggle arrives.

The usual spread of fruit tarts is on display in the kitchen and Wil is quick to offer everyone something to drink… the crowds begin arriving and I put a pile of sundry 3D printed bits and pieces out in the hope that they’ll find new homes. (They do.) There are a few more copies of Smells of Roses (mental note: ask Steve about that damn name, it’s starting to bug me), a couple of spare Barcode Burrs and several copies of Bram’s Hinged Cube.

Chris throws himself at Smells of Roses and looks suitably proud when he finally slides the stubborn tetrahedron together. Rani did a pretty good job on assembling some not-so-orderly tangles and several puzzlers need to have their bubbles burst by pointing out that the proper solution for Bram’s Hinged Cube does not allow the two sticky-outy-bits to meet. I reckon that puzzle is still hands-down the best value for money puzzle out this year.

Wil's spread for lunch is phenomenal yet again, there is plenty of food to refuel hungry puzzlers and there seems to be a constant supply of cakes, tarts and snacks on the go throughout the day!

Oskar takes up his traditional spot with a table-full of his latest creations. There’s a constant stream of puzzlers chatting and fiddling and buying bits and pieces throughout the morning. It’s a gloriously sunny day and while we’re all enjoying the warmth, sadly some of Oskar’s 3D prints start wilting in the afternoon heat, so they’re gathered up and put in the shade to be repaired. Oskar moves into the shade and there’s a surreal conversation when Steve asks Oskar what his day job is at the moment – there are some highly intelligent people in this community of puzzlers. I have no idea how I managed to blag my way in!
Jules had brought along a bunch of really interesting looking puzzle locks and they had a constant stream of admirers, and a slightly less constant stream of solvers. I manage to solve a few of them, but several of them bested me! The centrepiece was a fascinating German(?) padlock with the front removed so that you could see all of the complications added to make opening it seriously non-trivial.

Wil dished out a number of his latest disentanglement finds from China – what appears to be a riff on Foshee’s Holey Bolt – always a fun challenge!

It was great to catch up with Rob & Rob & Daan & Michel & Rik & Jan Willem & a whole bunch of other Puzzling friends from around Europe!

The crowds had thinned out and we headed into town for another great meal on the river – puzzles all over the table, and a rather vocal toy train for some reason. I spent ages trying (and failing) to work out Wil’s mind-reading trick, interrupted only by Steve’s successful solving of the method… must try harder – I now have two sets of those cards and I’m still no closer to working out the method! The meal was great and we headed back to Wil’s where Esther continued the entertainment with a traditional campfire game that had most of us confused for quite a while. Everyone eventually worked it out and the crowds thinned out further as folks with further to travel headed home… we puzzled and chatted and got plied with coffee and chocolates until we finally gave up just before midnight, knowing we had an hour’s drive back to Eindhoven.

Louis got us all back safe and sound and we said our thank-yous and goodbyes. Breakfast was a fairly leisurely affair with Ali and Steve so that we missed the traffic out of Eindhoven – that bit was successful, although we still contrived to find some traffic around Antwerp in late morning – albeit significantly less this time!

We topped up on snacks at the border, getting into Folkestone literally just after we drove onboard the train in Calais, in spite of the now-traditional tailgate snacking on the way back. The drive back up the motorway to Steve’s place was thoroughly uneventful (all the best journeys are!) and soon I was back in my own car heading back to Brum, where the sat-nag once again did a good job of keeping me away from the traffic so I made good time getting home…

An absolutely brilliant weekend away with my mates – Thanks a stack to Ali for doing all the driving, Louis for looking after us the whole weekend and treating us to escape rooms and flea markets, and Wil for hosting another awesome King’s Day party, and dinner! Thank you all for giving me a brilliant weekend’s entertainment.

Saturday, 8 July 2023

MPP IIIL

There’s always an MPP on the weekend before Wimbledon starts, just in case Dick’s in town. It turns out he is, and he duly arrives in Brum at a sensible time on the Friday morning. We spend the morning catching up and sharing puzzles back and forth. He’s concocted a gift for everyone at MPP that he’s called Walker’s Worry and he gives me an early bash at a copy. When I manage to struggle my way through it, he decides I need a proper puzzle and he gives me what could only be described as Walker’s Worry on Steroid – there’s an extra “complication” in the centre that still has me confused a week later – disentanglements really aren’t my strong point – in fact I’m beginning to wonder if puzzles in general are!

He also shows me a puzzle he’s cooked up in Wil’s honour called “Easy off, Hard on” because it’s easy to remove the shuttle, and less easy to return it to the start position. I manage to confirm the first part of the name isn’t too way off base, however a week later I’m suspecting that the second part of the name may well be apt as well.

Somewhere around lunchtime George and Roxanne arrive having driven from Panicale (over a few days). We manage to enjoy lunch outside in the sun without the hounds stealing too much of the food, and then settle back into some more puzzling and banter.

Late in the afternoon Dick and I head off to the airport to collect Louis and Wil, and George and Rox head off to their hotel to check in and freshen up. By the time we all meet up back at the house Gill’s arrived home and we sit outside in the early evening sunshine (I know that’s the second time I’ve mentioned it already, but you need to remember that it’s pretty unusual in this part of the world!) enjoying a pile of pizzas while we catch up on everyone’s news.

Wil had brought along copies of the Duck Puzzle for everyone and there was much laughter and confusion as folks sought to clarify the rather direct translation from the original Japanese instructions. Wil had given Dick a copy to play with in the car on the way back from the airport so I heard all the backwards-and-forwards and Dick’s thinking out loud (including there’s not enough material to make the same size duck, so it must be a scaled down version – which wasn’t that helpful!). By the time I got home I had an idea for the solution and I was delighted that when Wil gave me a copy, I was able to verify the answer within a couple of minutes… and I love it – definitely worth getting a copy from Osho or making one up yourself – the details are clear(!) in the pics.

George and Rox told us all about their latest adventures and the travails of getting the world’s largest puzzle collection out of customs in Rotterdam – you can imagine the conversation, can’t you: “Yes, those containers are a personal collection of puzzles…” – “Puzzles?” – “Yes, mechanical puzzles, you know, like a Rubik’s cube” – “ALL of those containers are full of Rubik’s cubes…?” – Ah, fuggedaboutit!

We puzzled and chatted into the night until we felt the need to head up to bed / back to hotels. I dropped Louis and Wil at a local hotel as there was no place at the inn for them, and then crashed myself – until the hounds got me up first thing in the morning.

After breakfast Dick and I headed down to the village hall to start getting things set up while Gill collected the Dutch contingent and dropped them off at the hall… where a couple of puzzlers had already arrived so we were able to get set up pretty quickly – and by the official off at 10am, we were all good to go!

The Millers had had a good rest in their hotel and managed to navigate their way to the village. George set up shop at a corner desk and appeared to hold a number of surgeries with interested puzzlers over the course of the day… including setting BurrTools to solving Vesa’s Pythagoras Puzzle that Wil had sold to a bunch of us. You get two coloured sets of jigsaw pieces and your goal is to successively make up a 2*2, 3*3, 4*4 and a 5*5 square. (And a whole bunch of other challenges…) The first couple aren’t too challenging, but the final one is a monster – albeit one that BurrTools managed to crank through in about 5 minutes. (I’m not sure how much optimising went into George’s modelling for that one!)

It was great to spend some time chatting with Andrew Coles – he’d brought along a whole bunch of prototypes and experiments and was interested in getting some feedback so I spent a goodly while battling my way through a few of his latest creations – including a particularly epic one that probably won’t ever go into production because it is just plain bonkers – and all inside a standard padlock that looks literally untouched.

I’d printed off a copy of a few two-piece TICs from Andrew Crowell and presented them to Dick on Friday as he thought they might be interesting, and then foisted them on a number of folks at MPP on as well – generally presenting folks with an unruly pile of pieces and inviting them to assemble them into cubes… everyone seemed to enjoy them so my conclusion was that they represented a really nice balance of interesting enough so as not to be trivial, but not brutal so you don’t end up not enjoying them… which makes them an excellent puzzle to hand around to folks, IMHO.

Shane also had a couple of prototypes that he wanted playing with, so I duly had a play, and then made some very encouraging noises and I’m hopeful that one or two of those will definitely see the light of day.

It was great to see Ed again after a bit of a break – we had a few Karakuri boxes there for him to try, but he ended up bashing through them really quickly. The man is a machine…

Speaking of machines, Rich spent what seemed like several hours attempting a particularly tricky assembly of a 1980’s toy consisting of multi-coloured plastic C-shaped pieces – Space Cubes. He’d get to the second or third layer quite consistently and then there’d be a familiar crash of pieces falling to the table… so familiar that it almost got to the point where we considered not laughing with (honest, gov!) him every time it happened.

At one point there was a really serious presentation from Frank – Jo had bought Steve a really thoughtful gift and Steve quite literally had a tear in his eye when he opened the box – a very touching moment. (There may be some debate as to whether Jo thinks she bought it for Steve, and where that tear in Steve’s eye really came from…)

Ali had brought along his collection of Lego puzzles for folks who’d missed the last gathering to have a bash at and they duly went down just as well as they had on the previous occasion.

Mikael had brought along his vlogging gear and proceeded to film a semi-impromptu round of “Are you a Puzzlemaster?” around the hall – I can’t speak for all the questions, but I suspect that we got slightly easier questions than he normally inflicts on his guests. I did have to laugh when he hit up Shane for one of the questions – I’m sure once all the colourful language is bleeped out there’ll be something left! (Maybe… actually, subtitles might be a good idea…)

Several of us were very pleased when we discovered that the deli was serving pig buns and having established this fact, and avoiding the queues, we told the rest of the gang in the hall that pig buns were available… and the rush ensued. Once again, the little room proved a great lunch venue with plenty of munching and banter taking place far away from the precious puzzles.

It was great to see Amy, especially as family responsibilities are probably going to make it trickier for her come along to our next few meetings.

James had made the trip up from Devon and brought a box full of things that needed re-assembly. I’m not sure what the final score was, but I think we managed to get more than a few of them properly assembled for him so his trip wasn’t entirely wasted. For a man who’s not collecting puzzles any longer (as he keeps telling me) he still keeps acquiring some really interesting puzzles, including some absolutely stunning old antique chests (with plenty of puzzling elements!).

Gill ferried Dick back to the train station while we packed up the hall and headed up to the house after the obligatory puppy safety briefing. Rolo’s definitely getting more used to having a big bunch of puzzlers around and settled down fairly quickly before taking herself up to her bed under the hall table upstairs… while the puzzlers spread themselves out around the house – with several puzzling outside until the rain arrived.

Peter’s Pan provided the usual excellent fish suppers, although I totally failed to remember to pick up something gluten-free for Fraser – must do better next time or he won’t come back!

The puzzling continued until somewhere around 22:30 when folks realised they still had a three-hour drive and should probably start heading back London-wards… so we wound up the party and deposited the Dutch contingent back at their hotel.

Next day was a lovely relaxed puzzling affair with Louis and Wil – I got the chance to talk about some puzzles that I’d been struggling with and got some valuable advice, and I got Louis to crack open my Lost Vault which wasn’t behaving itself properly. The combination lock element wasn’t working, so Louis managed to open it using the wrong numbers, then diagnosed the issue and duly fixed it with a little judicious sanding. (There was a spot of glue on one of the pins which meant it randomly dragged the next wheel when it shouldn’t have.) Lost Vault now works perfectly! Thanks Louis!

Somewhere after lunchtime I dropped the boys off at the airport so they could head to AMS and I headed home to chill…

Another awesome MPP weekend in the books – thanks to everyone who came and made it memorable!

 

 

Saturday, 6 May 2023

King’s Day 2023

A few of us have been making the annual trip across the channel to Wil’s legendary King’s Day Puzzle Parties for a while now, and now that we seem to be past all the international lock-downs, Steve, Ali and I made the trip across once again this year.

We met up in Eindhoven where Louis picked the lads up from the airport and collected me from the train station (I’d flown into Schiphol). We checked into our hotel, grabbed a few puzzles and then headed to Louis’ where he’d laid out a fabulous spread for lunch. Well-feasted we hauled out the puzzles and settled into the usual routine of “Here you’ll like this one”, “That’s impossible” and “Aahhh, I really like that one!” with varying delays between them. (Louis’ delays tended to be a lot shorter than ours for some reason.)

I’d taken along my copies of Karakuri Packing, Chained Lumbers and Coin Wallet from Mine’s latest release knowing that the guys probably hadn’t played with them yet… they all went down really well, although Steve stopped short on one or two of them, choosing to delay any gratification in favour of respecting the designers… I’m sure that’s what he said.

Several of us had a play with Louis’ copy of Tri-Rodspan – a 12-piece co-ordinate motion puzzle designed by Bruce Patterson and modelled by George Bell. I’d printed out a set of pieces just before I left on this trip so I was keen to see how easily they went together – fortunately Steve was keen to see how easily Louis’ copy could be disassembled so I got the chance to assemble it. Unfortunately I didn’t pay quite enough attention to the colours and ended up reassembling them in a totally uncoordinated fashion… which set off some serious OCD twitching and a “proper assembly” was undertaken, only for Steve to spin it and start the whole process all over again…

I spent a while fiddling around with a copy of a tray-packing puzzle (Amsterdam?) calling for different levels of Dutch houses to be made in a frame… I managed a couple and felt quite good about myself until Louis promptly went and found several new solutions in a matter of minutes. (Apparently there are several challenges!)

Somewhere around 6pm Louis ordered a massive pile of pizzas which magically arrived at the door a short while later, so we feasted again… plenty pizzas disappeared include some of the famous cinnamon and sugar pizzas that were left for the dessert round.

At some point Mieke prompted us to see about playing an escape room and she and Louis then managed to find one that had a slot available for later that evening, so a short while after dinner we all piled into the car and headed off to a nearby town to help our mate Barry get his meth lab sorted before the cops raided it – and then we played an escape room.

The room had a few really good surprises – the first transition caught us all by surprise and made us all smile – there was some darkness-induced frustration in the second phase due to the flashlight we were supposed to have not being available as it was broken (as we discovered afterwards) and then the third phase was really well done… we made a bit of a meal of one of the main puzzles and that slowed us down a lot, but on the whole we cranked through it all pretty quickly and we enjoyed the room. It was fun to be on the other side of the law in a game…

Back to Louis’ for a little more puzzling before he deposited us back at our hotel for some sleep ahead of the main event on Sunday.

He duly collected us after breakfast and we headed off to Venlo where we were the first the arrive with Wil literally just having finished all his preparations. There were warm greetings and plenty catchings up over a quick coffee and tart before the rest of the known puzzling world began arriving.

The Monkeys had taken along a few copies of Burrly Legal to offload and custom-made Wil a six-piece Burrtle Opener to add to one of his collections – exceptionally well-played The Two Brass Monkeys!!!

The weather on Sunday was fantastic, so the outside tables were put to very good use, with Oskar in his usual spot with piles of new 3D-printed designs inviting anyone to have a fiddle. 

I spent quite a while getting myself hopelessly entangled in a copy of Rainbow Stairs – and just when I thought I was making some progress, Oskar sat down next to me and said “You realise that’s a variation of the Fifteen puzzle don’t you?” – a particularly cruelly-timed comment given I’d literally just got myself to the point where I needed to swap two pieces around… Thankfully(!) he went on to point out that it didn’t have the same parity constraints, so I might actually be able to solve it… and a while later I did indeed manage to align all of my rainbow’s stairs.

While I was doing that Steve was frantically twiddling the handle on Let That Sink In until it did in fact sink in (or out) and then Oskar talked us through the theory behind it – I loved the bit where he assumed we could all instantaneously multiply 7,11 and 13 in our heads while he was telling us about the design. (It’s 1,001, which is interesting because the opposing gears multiply out to 1,000…)

Several of us had a go at his Screw Gears – and I for one can confidently say that I did not come up with a helpful strategy for solving them – over dinner I did manage to almost assemble the screws in precisely the wrong order and I considered that a major achievement.

Michel was handing out copies of a safety pin challenge that I enjoyed playing with while I was writing this blog post – if you want to have a bash yourself, put three safety pins together in such a way that they won’t come apart, but if any one of the three pins is opened, all of the pins come apart.

It was great to catch up with Jan Willem again and to relieve him of a couple of old Karakuri boxes that he had spare copies of… and in time-honoured tradition when I went through airport security the next day, that was the one thing they were interested in! (I suspect they’re all closet Japanese puzzle box aficionados.)

I spent quite a while playing with some extremely rare wonderful old Karakuri boxes from Wil’s collection over the course of the afternoon – a rare treat indeed.

Frans was looking a lot less battered than he has been and it was nice to catch up with him and Rob and Goetz and Michel and Rob (yes, the other one) and Patrick and Christian… and no doubt several others that I chatted or puzzled with over the course of the day… and have forgotten to mention.

At some point the crowds began thinning out and when Wil received a call from his local restaurant he realised he totally missed his booking slot… we all bundled into a few cars and headed into town for another fabulous meal – with the obligatory puzzles on the table as usual. The food was superb, the company excellent and it turned into another night to remember.

Once dinner was complete a few of us ended up back at Wil’s for a little more puzzling and a lot more coffee – it’d been a long couple of days for some of us – before Louis saw us safely back to our hotel somewhere after midnight.

Thanks a stack to Wil for hosting us all on Sunday and giving us another King’s Day to remember and to Louis for fetching and carrying us over the weekend and entertaining and feeding us royally on the Saturday!

 <Some pics courtesy of Wil as I didn't take enough myself!>

Sunday, 22 May 2022

King’s Day 2022

After a two-year hiatus, Wil sent out an invitation to his King’s Day Puzzle Party and it didn’t take long to decide to sign up for it – it’s been ages since I’ve seen most of my puzzling mates and it felt like the pandemic was beginning to let up, so the decision was made. Plans were made on a couple of our regular Sunday evening calls and soon enough it was the appointed Saturday morning and my alarm was waking me at some unearthly hour so I could spend an hour queueing until I could use my Fast Pass through the airport security queue… from there it was all a walk in the park!

The short flight across the channel to Schiphol was uneventful, if a little strange with everyone wearing the obligatory face masks.  And customs and immigration was absolutely painless… Brexit hadn’t brought massive immigration queues this time at least! After sorting a few connectivity issues and some help from my local travel fixer, I found the right train and headed toward Eindhoven, avoiding some holiday rail works.  

Louis met me at the station and whisked me off to his place for some lunch and a couple of hours puzzling until the Two Brass Monkeys’ train arrived. We met them at the station and headed to the hotel to check in and dump our bags before some more puzzling at Louis’.

I had a great time working my way through Coremods’ Ice Box – I really liked the number of totally different mechanisms that have been incorporated into a neat little puzzle – and if you don’t smile when you’re “presented” with your treasure, then there’s something wrong with you! (I liked it so much I bought myself a copy a week or so later when a new batch went up on the Coremods Etsy shop.)

I had a lot less success with Pair-o-Dice – I spent ages on it and got precisely nowhere – even after Louis pointed out that one of the bits had broken and it actually just fell out if you held it in the right orientation… he ended up giving me another nudge and that just left me stuck in a different place… in the end he put it in a bag and told me to take it home and solve it (and a few weeks later it’s still testing me, albeit I’ve made a fair amount of progress in the interim at least – and how the heck I’m going to get that thing back together, I have no idea!)

Late afternoon we headed out for a time-travelling escape room in a nearby town – we started off in a large room with rock paintings and some puzzles to solve and having done that unlocked a time machine that we all crammed into. Once we’d solved the obligatory puzzle we leapt forward in time and headed through into another room. This one slowed us down a bit until we worked out what we were supposed to be doing and then it was back into the time machine… except the doorway between the second set of rooms and the time machine is quite small, and some of our team are somewhat larger than life so there were some groans from one of our number when we realised we were heading back to the time machine… little did he know we’d be visiting that room more later.

This time when we were released back into the first room, it had changed totally – apparently all of the walls had been replaced while we’d been time travelling… a process that got repeated again and again as we skipped through time – quite a fun mechanic – all implemented manually by the proprietor while we were trying to solve the next set of puzzles.

One of the funniest puzzles involved catching rubber chickens as they were released from the ceiling – with everyone needing to catch their chickens before they hit the floor. That part took a bit longer than it could have as one of our number kept missing his chickens… until about the third round when he was so delighted that he'd finally caught his first one that he promptly totally ignored his next one due to the ongoing celebration of his first catch… it did make us wonder if rubber chickens were the next tongue depressor/hamster/meme thingy.

We managed to get out of the escape rom with a few minutes to spare and then enjoyed sitting at the bar watching the footage of the bunch of us bumbling around in the room mostly looking pretty clueless and squealing when the hooded monk put in an appearance… really unusual escape room with bonus points for the multiple re-use of all of the rooms.

After ordering some pizzas we headed back to the Coolens’ for dinner and, you guessed it, some more puzzling. Somewhere around 11pm I started fading badly and Louis dropped us off at the hotel for some rest before the main event on Sunday.

I met the Monkeys for breakfast and then Louis collected us and drove us through to Venlo where Wil gave us a massively warm welcome. Familiar faces began arriving and soon there was a great buzz around the place as people who hadn’t seen each other in ages caught up and told one another what had been puzzling them recently.

Oskar set out a table-full of newly printed designs and delighted all comers with stories about each of them – how they were designed, what was particularly interesting about them. He had a small copy of Jacobs’ Ladder with an unglued key piece that allows it to be assembled and demonstrated without the move-count getting way too high to return to its starting position and he tells us how AJ Jacobs copy of Jacobs’ Ladder got its final dimensions: it’s the largest standard shipping dimensions for ordinary packages – and that’s what determined the level of the generational puzzle designed for The Puzzler. That’s interesting?

Oskar and the Monkeys spent a little while checking out the nice brass prototype the lads had made up from one of Oskar’s designs and the conversations looked fairly positive so hopefully there’ll be another puzzling lump of brass appearing at some point in the future.

The Monkeys had also brought along some stock of their current wares, as well as a number of copies of Six Hookers – making their world debut at Wil’s King’s Day Party.

It was super to see Rik and Maria, Chris and Michel and to meet a couple of new puzzlers. Lovely to be able to catch up with Jan Willem again – emailing isn’t quite as good as a chat in person.

As usual Wil totally outdid himself on the catering front – with a massive selection of fruit tarts on offer pretty much the whole day, and a huge spread of scrumptious goodies for lunch as well… it just kept on coming.

I did my usual of alternating between sitting and fiddling with an interesting puzzle while chatting to someone, and raking through Wil’s hundreds of crates of puzzles – in search of new treasure. I managed to pick out a couple of Karakuri boxes that I rather fancied and put them on one side.

One of the puzzles I randomly picked up and failed to solve was a simple-looking disentanglement puzzle from Jan Sturm – after quite a while of unsuccessfully solving it I raked through the Sturm crates to pick out a copy, unsure if I already have a copy (in which case I’ve probably solved it at some point – and in that case I now have two copies of an excellent puzzle – ah well…).

Later in the afternoon, as folks began heading home and the numbers subsided it was lovely to spend some time chatting with Wil and just catching up – he’d had a picture book made of some of his Facebook posts and presented me with a customised copy that even Gill will like – the picture on the back of it came from my first visit to Wil back in 2011 – so we recreated the shot in the same spot in Wil’s lounge, this time with the book cover… and Steve kindly took eight or ten shots of the scene, and a couple of videos – most of which had his finger in front of the lens… thanks mate! :-)

In the early evening, the remaining souls decamped into the village for dinner at a wonderful new restaurant on the river as our usual Chinese restaurant wasn’t open as they’ve been having difficulty finding a suitable chef due to the pandemic. Wil  treated us all to a fantastic dinner and then we loitered down at the river for a while enjoying ice creams.

Back at Wil’s there was time for some more chat and fiddling with puzzles and when Wil fortuitously stumbled across a copy of Roger’s Mastercard variant he remembered that he’d put aside for me and duly presented me with it.

Before I left he also gave me a copy of a prototype of a new box from JCC which I’d been fiddling with unsuccessfully at both Louis’ place and at Wil’s… and I’ve now been fiddling unsuccessfully with it at my place as well… there’s a wonderful symmetry in not being able to solve puzzles anywhere.  

It was quite late when we finally headed back to Eindhoven where I more or less just collapsed in a pile on my hotel bed… I’d get everything sorted for the return trip in the morning…

…which duly came around a lot quicker than I’d hoped – I met  Steve and Ali for breakfast and decided to join them on the train out of Eindhoven in the hope of getting to Schiphol in plenty of time for my flight that afternoon. We had about an hour together on the train before we headed off in different directions – nice to be able to chat about a great weekend we’d been able to spend together, catch up with friends, oh, and play with puzzles.

I’m glad I decided to get to Schiphol early as I ended up spending two and a half hours queuing to get into security – it seems that airlines may be flying, but airports aren’t quite ready for the people yet…

In spite of all the queueing it was a thoroughly wonderful weekend – Wil put on a fantastic puzzle party, and it was lovely to be able to catch up with him after so long. Louis, as always, was an absolute rock-star, keeping the visitors royally entertained and carting us around all over the show. Thanks guys – that was awesome!

Sunday, 28 November 2021

Gear Box

A couple of months ago I’d asked Wil to send me a couple of things off his latest update and at the end of my note, I’d asked him if there was “anything else that I just had to buy at the moment…” He duly replied to tell me that he did indeed have something that I ought to buy and by coincidence it didn’t have a name yet, so he’d decided that it would be called the “Anything Else Box” – and as Wil has never once given me a bad suggestion, I added it to the order and eagerly awaited its arrival.

A few days later I found a handsome box with twelve intriguing gears on the lid – there are three rows, with each row having four meshed gears – and a set of connectors ensures that the navigating pins are ganged together between the rows – so the pins in a specific column all need to move up and down in unison… which is great because it dramatically cuts down on the possible moves at any one point in the process… and it also means that you need to go through quite a few moves to find a solution…

It seems pretty clear that this is a box, and that by manipulating those gears and their connectors, you should be able to unlock the lid… in its fully locked state, the connectors are in a position that allows the acrylic lid to slot neatly into place – ensuring that if you want it neat and tidy, you’re probably at the furthest possible state from being able to actually open the thing… nice touch!

Remove the lid (– that’s not supposed to be part of the puzzle, Nick!) and begin to fiddle with those gears – given the paths through the gears, it looks like you’ll be wanting to get all of the gears pretty much to the opposite ends of their travel… and that you’ll need to both rotate them and manipulate those connectors… however, being meshed gears within the rows, they will obviously move in opposite directions to their neighbour – which means you really need to keep a cool head when you’re trying to work out which way you’re wanting things to go at any point… and you will need to think about that quite a lot in my experience.

I’m pretty sure those paths and the order of the gears are constructed to confuse – I found myself going backwards and forwards several times as I thought I was heading in the right direction only to find that I should have done something else before this particular set of moves to release a later move, so I’d need to backtrack and try again…

…and there was a whole lot of backtracking because I kept finding myself up against a position that couldn’t be improved from where I was…

…and in spite of all that backtracking, I still didn’t find myself getting into that normal Zen-space of mindlessly navigating an n-ary puzzle – this one kept me on my toes all the way through and it almost felt like you were having to work things from first principles the whole time…

When you do finally get to where you think you want to be, there’s a sneaky little step at the end that might leave you confused for a while once again until you finally release the locking mechanism and open the box – and at that point you really do need to admire Jean-Claude’s impressively efficient design that puts all of the mechanism inside a really slim lid… which leaves LOTS of space for putting something surprising inside the box for the next puzzlist to discover.

A damn fine recommendation from Wil that’s now more widely available as the Gear Box – it’s always going to be the Anything Else Box for me though…