The pressure has been on me this week! I received the latest batch from Jakub
and knew that he really wanted to put them up for sale this weekend. This
little fact was dropped by Ivan Danik who runs the
Puzzle Guy
YouTube channel. Ivan also received the puzzles so that he can film them and
do the product photography for the
Pelikan store. Ivan let slip that the puzzles should go on sale in a week and so I had
better get a move on and get working! Gulp! I'm a rubbish puzzler at best and
solving 7 gorgeously precise puzzles that fast was going to be a huge
challenge!
Play-girl 2
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Play-girl 2 by Alexander Magyarics
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How can anyone resist yet another wonderful packing puzzle designed on a
triangular grid by
Alexander Magyarics? Play-girl 2 has been beautifully made with such supreme precision that the
corners are sharp enough to break skin! The lovely diamond-shaped box, made
from pink oak has identical, rather wide openings on each side which allow
entry of the Wenge pieces but then must be left filled at the end. Working
outside of the box reveals through simple logic how the pieces should be
oriented - this process alone is quite a nice challenge and then there is the
much harder problem of assembling inside the box. This has to be done by
working out how to disassemble them through where the holes should be. It’s
quite a dexterity puzzle as well as a logic problem as the triangular pieces
want to spring apart in certain configurations. The disassembly sequence is a
level 11.3.3 which is pretty tough to remember to do then in reverse. It took
me 3 days and I loved every moment of it!
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A lovely challenge |
It is also huge fun entering the puzzle into Burrtools as I am not used to
working with the triangular grid but you should definitely do this for practice
as I’m sure there will be more puzzles like this coming from Alexander and
Pelikan.
Get Trunk 1
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Get Trunk 1 by Alexander Magyarics
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I adored the
Bugs packing puzzle
which could be hung on a wall as a piece of art and this is another along
similar lines - it is very large at 21cm square, it has a clear acrylic cover
and has been drilled so that it can be hung on a wall for display. It’s almost
as if this puzzle was designed by Alexander and made by Pelikan specifically for
me. With my family history of elephant collecting which I inherited from my late
mum, I would never be able to resist another fun challenge with the same theme.
This time we have an Oak and Maple frame and 6 different elephant shapes made
from Acacia, Padauk, Wenge, Cherry and Zebrano (2 pieces).
I started playing with this before I knew the instructions. I was trying to
place all 6 pieces in the frame for quite a while before Alexander contacted
me to tell me that there are 3 challenges. Each one is to place "just" 5
elephants inside. The first 2 challenges are to use just one of the Zebrano
elephants alone with the other 4 pieces and then a more difficult
supplementary challenge is to use both the Zebrano pieces and fit another 3
of the others inside the frame (but which pieces?). The shapes only differ
in the position of the trunks and the complexity of their shape makes this a
much tougher challenge than expected.
So far I have only found one of the solutions…I blame my failure on the
others on the cat on my lap who won’t lie still whilst I balance this on top
of him. I cannot show a picture here because you don't want to cheat and see
a solution do you? Get this puzzle - you really won't be disappointed. It is
seriously tough.
Octopus 33
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Octopus 33 by Osanori Yamamoto
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Osanori Yamamoto
and Pelikan have made yet another sequential movement puzzle in which 4
pieces are held in a maze and can slide and move in very restricted ways -
the aim is to remove those pieces by carefully navigating the maze and
orienting the pieces in such a way that they can be slid out through the
single hole that will allow it. The last one of this type was the
Waffle
which I really struggled with. The Octopus 33 is made with a Bubinga and
Wenge frame with 4 identical yellow Garapa L-shaped pieces providing a
lovely contrast in colours. This seems to be probably the most restricted of
this type of puzzle that Osanori-San has created. It’s quite obvious early
on where the exit point is and obviously rotations will be required to get
all the pieces out of the frame. However, the obvious moves that you want to
do are apparently impossible. The 8 “tentacles” of the Octopus make the
movements that you want to do really quite hard to achieve.
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A significant challenge
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It’s a nice series of discoveries to find how to manoeuvre the pieces and
the Aha! moment has a very unexpected aspect to it which actually made my
jaw drop when I realised what Osanori-san had managed to design.
Hidden Curry no 90
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Hidden curry no 90 by Dr Volker Latussek
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When I received this batch from Jakub, I was rather surprised at the name of
this puzzle. It doesn’t look much like an Indian meal.
Dr Latussek, a master of the unusual packing puzzle (I have still not managed to solve
Fermat
or the
Euklid for Nick
puzzles!) has informed me that this puzzle has been designed and named for
Paul Curry, magician
and apparent inventor of the
missing square puzzle. The Garapa pieces fit into the square Acacia compartment rather like a
tangram (it’s not quite the same shapes as a tangram).
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Quite a deep lip to get the pieces under
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The aim is to tip them out and fit them in the frame on the other side. This
is extremely difficult due to the overhanging lip. I failed initially and
decided to put the pieces back in the top frame for storage…this proved
tougher than expected. There is definitely something odd going on with the
dimensions of the pieces as they were rather harder to put back than they
should be and some orientations won’t work. Have a really good look at the
pieces before trying to solve it and then it will become a much nicer
challenge. I didn’t properly look until I’d spent a couple of hours failing!
I think I got lucky with this one - I suspect that it is really quite
difficult. Of course I am not going to post the solution for you - that
would spoil it for you.
Half Soma
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Half Soma by Dr Volker Latussek
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This puzzle remains unsolved for me. It is another of those anti-slide
puzzles that Dr Latussek has created where the pieces fit easily into the
box but that is not the challenge. The Zebrano pieces are Soma cube pieces
where every single cubie in each piece has been cut in half before being put
together. It arrives with all but one placed and a nice smooth surface on
show. The aim, very like the previous
Shrinking Soma, is to assemble all the pieces into the Pink oak box so that the smooth
surface is flush with the top and, despite there being many gaps underneath,
none of the pieces will slide at all or drop down to a lower level.
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Really interesting pieces
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I am just about able to assemble shapes but creating assemblies that won’t
allow pieces to move is a logical arena that I just cannot seem to
comprehend. I have actually struggled to assemble the Soma cube with the
pieces cut down like this and got nowhere near solving it. This is a puzzle
for someone seeking a seriously difficult challenge. If anyone has any idea
about how to go about this type of puzzle then I’d be very grateful for some
assistance in technique.
Turtle
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Turtle by Alfons Eyckmans
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Alfons Eyckmans
designs wonderful burrs…many shapes and many different piece numbers but
amongst my favourites are the hidden piece burrs with a contained animal
inside (
Goetz
refers to this as the
Burr zoo). This one, Turtle, is a significantly difficult challenge at level 46
(27.7.1.2.1.1.1.1.2). It has been beautifully made by Pelikan using Pink
Oak, Jatoba, Acacia & Oak and all the pieces slide perfectly despite the
rather humid conditions we have here just now. I did not expect to manage to
solve this in time for the release of these puzzles but had a thoroughly fun
time exploring and not too long getting lost (maybe I was lucky?) There are
quite a few blind ends and a number of choices to make during the
disassembly which makes it a pretty challenging solve but not impossibly so.
It took me all day on Saturday before the magnificently decorated turtle
could be removed.
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Simple burr sticks and a very large turtle
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The turtle is unexpectedly really big, taking up a huge amount of the
interior of the puzzle. This will explain why there is so much movement
possible during the solution because to make space for such a large central
figure the burr sticks prove to be quite shallow and simply designed. The
reassembly will definitely require Burrtools. If you are into burrs at all
then this will be an essential purchase - it is stunning!
Dragster
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Dragster by Stephan Baumegger
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Another hidden piece burr with a motor vehicle theme from
Stephan Baumegger.
This puzzle looks stunning made from Jatoba, American Walnut, Maple and
Wenge. It has a very unusual shape and little glimpses of the Dragster
inside can be seen if you peek between the burr sticks.
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The original by Stephan |
I actually own an
original copy of this bought from Stephan back in 2015 and have never
managed to solve it! I was quite a lot better at burrs back then which gives
a hint at the difficulty of this puzzle. It may be that I can solve it this
time but with my deadline to post reviews by this weekend, I’ve not had time
to try yet. Puzzlewillbeplayed tells me that this burr has a disassemble level of 28.2.3.4.5.2.2.2.3 so you can be certain that this will be a fantastic challenge ending with the removal of a wonderful little car hidden inside.
So which should you get? That's a terribly hard thing to tell. I personally cannot resist the elephants and the special packing puzzles by Alexander. But the incredibly tough challenges by Dr Latussek are brilliant too. I really wish that I had the knowledge of the logic required to solve anti-slide puzzles but until someone explains them to me, I will never be able to solve them. The wooden disentanglement/sliding piece puzzles by Osanori-san are very addictive to me because everything is visible and yet working out what to move where is still a huge challenge. Then there are the burrs with hidden pieces inside. Almost no-one else makes complex burrs as good as Jakub and Jaroslav and so for me these are an essential purchase. Keep an eye on their store as they will be going up for sale quite soon.
Don't forget that Peter Hajek's book is already up for sale - it is a Tour de force production with beautiful pictures and the definitive history and analysis of all the puzzle world has to offer on the subject of puzzle boxes. It covers puzzles both old and new, European, American and traditional Japanese as well as the wonderful creations by the Karakuri Group. There are even puzzles discussed which I can justify owning as not traditionally thought of as boxes.
Take care everyone - the Pandemic has not gone away - go get your vaccine as soon as you can to help protect yourself as well as others in your family or those in society who are more vulnerable. With the hundreds of millions of doses administered we can definitively say that the vaccines are safe (especially compared to getting the illness) with a very low chance of temporary side effects and no real long term effects to speak of apart from the intended immunity.
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