A mechanical puzzle blog from a grown man who should know better!!
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Sunday, 18 October 2020
Juno Shows SDBB Master-y of his Craft
Juno's SDBB Master - just a 6 piece burr? Definitely not! Stunning
grain colour on it.
It is NOT a box! It is a Sequential Discovery Burred Box...Master
edition.
Juno said:
"This is the most complex sequential discovery puzzle we have ever
produced"
Who could possibly resist that?
Previously, I have gushed about
Juno's earlier
puzzles in the SDBB (sequential discovery burred box) - series (SDBB
original
here and SDBBB
here) and they have appeared in my Top 10ish each year they have come out (No 2
in
2018
& also
2019). Rumour got out that he was making a final one in the series this year
and that it was going to be the pinnacle of his crafting career. The hype
was amazing and it was being discussed by all and sundry on line. Juno and
Yukari had had a real problem with their site going under when they last had
a big new release and they had boosted the server several times since then
to cope with the strain. They also put out a request that people don't
hammer the site and refresh every few seconds to try and purchase one of
these new and wonderful puzzles. Needless to say, that request failed as it
appeared like the entire world logged on to Pluredro.com at 7am Brisbane
time a few weeks ago. Yet again the site fell over spectacularly. I really
have no idea whether any site could cope with such an onslaught (We all know
that Eric had similar problems a few months ago). After an evening of
intermittently trying to log on and getting nowhere I gave up and went to
bed a little despondent that it probably wasn't going to happen (and I know
of several other Brits who did the same). At this point I have to say "Thank
Heavens for being a Middle Aged Bloke"! As a man of a certain age who likes
to keep his fluids up to protect his kidneys, I suffer from the perennial
side-effect of having to get up to release the fluids into an alternative
receptacle (loo) at about 3am. Much to the disgust of Mrs S, I padded to the
loo with my mobile phone and quickly checked what was happening at Pluredro.
Oooh! I got on straight away and there was a clickable buy link. Click,
click, PayPal, click and Yeeehaw! I went back to bed a few minutes
later with a very large grin on my face and the following morning I was able
to inform Mrs S that she had bought me my birthday present for this year. Of
course she was totally overjoyed -
Whack! Ouch!
The whole set of Sequential Discovery Burred Boxes
They were dispatched very quickly by Juno and Yukari and they arrived at the
few in the UK who had been successful in the middle of this last week. I had
paid my customs ransom immediately to ParcelFarce and it was due to arrive
on Wednesday. I was very excited when I saw that
Goetz had
received, solved and written about his copy on Thursday and he said straight
away that it is the best puzzle of the year - I had very high hopes.
This puzzle is BIG! Quite a bit bigger than its' predecessors at 133mm in
each axis and is made of PNG Rosewood, Jarrah and assorted metal
pieces. It looks, to all intents and purposes, just like a rather enormous
and very beautifully coloured 6 piece burr. This time Juno has finished the
ends of the burr sticks in a stepped manner rather like the signature work
from
Brian Young -
to the right you can see the Six of One, Half a Dozen of the Other made by
Brian.
There is no indication externally that there is anything special about
this puzzle. Until you start to play and straight away there is a huge
hint that something different is inside. The Jarrah can be seen inside and
suddenly you get just a hint of the fun that is about to happen. The
second step, just looks you in the face and you feel compelled to do what
is obvious and are rewarded with a burr stick removed from the contraption
and an obvious compartment in it, which of course won't open despite the
obvious handle to pull.
You can see just a hint of what might be in store just there.
First piece has a cavity No, of course it won't open by
pulling!
Ok, that won't open so what next? Go back to the puzzle and drop something
on a sleeping cat - he doesn't seem to mind at all and the next step is
possible - the cavity is open and inside is a lovely little tool. So far
it has not been terribly difficult but a very nice sequence of Aha!
moments.
Below is a very slight spoiler so I have put it behind a button - only
click if you feel overwhelmingly excited to see a burr stick cavity.
There's no real hint here...move on
Now I have another interesting tool and wonder what to do with it. Look
around and the next step is obvious - the tool is used and another
cavity is revealed. I don't want to spoil too much for people here.
Gradually more and more tools are found and you need to work out how
they have to be used. At one point I exclaim with delight as a
particularly lovely movement occurs which was totally unexpected. Juno
has put everything into this puzzle. After a little while we have all 6
sticks separated and then the task remains to open the remaining cavity
- there is one cavity per stick and each one requires a different
mechanism to be opened. Each cavity provides a new tool but as you move
through the puzzle it becomes tougher to work out what to do with the
tools - sometimes even use more than one at a time. I've been asked to
hide these next photos behind a spoiler button. Don't click if you have
the puzzle but not solved it yet - there is no real giveaway in the
picture but I've been asked.
Here are all the cavities to be opened. This is NOT a
spoiler!
Finally, when you have worked out the entire correct sequence, the only
description can be "GLORIOUS"! You will have found a whole lotta
beautifully made tools and a whole lotta clever locking mechanisms and got
a nice prize of an infinity symbol which makes a change from a loaf of
bread!
All cavities open and not a spoiler in sight!
The burr can be assembled without all the pieces inside which is a nice
little extra challenge if you haven't done the "back and forth" thing like I
did which left the assembly indelibly marked in my brain.
4 cavity covers and a burr
The full reset of the puzzle is delightfully easy...it doesn't require a full
backtrack of every move. Place the various tools in the cavities and close
them before the fancy burr reassembly is done and then it is ready to
do again and again and again! I never get bored with doing this one. The
sheer complexity of this puzzle is staggering (it is simpler to solve than
the
Slammed car
but much more complex too) and I am amazed that he managed to put so much
into such a small space. Mrs S has excelled herself with my birthday
present this year - it will very much make up for the fact that on my
birthday I have to Covid swab myself (yuk 🤮) and have blood taken as part
of a study
My verdict? I love it! A candidate for puzzle of the year? Most definitely!
Will it get to number one this time? You will have to wait until New Year's
Day 2021 to find out.
Unfortunately these were all sold out after about 5 or 6 hours and I
know that a good few people were disappointed. Juno cannot possibly make
enough for everyone and some people will need to look at the auction
sites to get a copy. Good luck to all of you who try - I hope it doesn't
cost you too much.
For some reason bnotifications of your comments are always flagged as spam in my email despite being published - I will need to look into that and see what I can do.
I am so glad that you agree, George! There are several cavities but no bread at all so definitely not a box. BUT I do think we need to stipulate that bread needs to be a minimum size to count!
Whew! No bread inside? I guess that means I don't need to buy one.
ReplyDeleteBut wait ... no bread inside means it is NOT a puzzle box, so I DO need to buy one. Uh oh!
For some reason bnotifications of your comments are always flagged as spam in my email despite being published - I will need to look into that and see what I can do.
DeleteI am so glad that you agree, George! There are several cavities but no bread at all so definitely not a box. BUT I do think we need to stipulate that bread needs to be a minimum size to count!
Well I'm not into SDs either so my decision was not difficult. This puzzle is hard to classify as it could fit into many categories: Burr, Box, SD.
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