Yes, if you have been watching my
new stuff page
or my
FB page then
you will have seen that quite a few new toys have arrived at PuzzleMad HQ over
the last month or so and Mrs S has become increasingly irritated with me. The
camel's back very nearly snapped at the end of last week when I had to admit to
her that there might be another delivery from Jakub, Jaroslav and team whilst I
was at work last week. My incipient murder was delayed by a plane malfunction in
Germany and the promised big box didn't arrive on time. The end result was that
it was delayed until last Monday and I was working from home - no there were no
knee replacements on the kitchen table! I was doing committee work on the
dreaded MS Teams - 😱. The arrival of the box was beautifully timed between
meetings and I managed to intercept it and secrete it away before there was an
explosion! Phew.
The downside of the delayed flight was that I had much less time to play. I
have only managed to solve 4 of the 8 arrivals so far. Hopefully the rest will
be ready for next Sunday.
The Bunch 2.2
This gorgeous cube is another of a long line of amazing interlocking puzzles
from the Master, Alfons Eyckmans. I have quite a few of these now, both
direct from him, as well as versions from
Pelikan
and they are always great fun to play with as well as looking fabulous on
display. This one is very attractive made from Wenge, Maple and Purpleheart.
It is a simpler design than many of the others but this makes for a rather
nice exploration and solve.
My first time dismantling it I found a rather nice rotational shortcut but
quickly put the piece that is removed back in the puzzle as I know that Alfons
tends not to like rotational solutions. The first piece comes out nice and
logically and opens up quite a lot of movement but for a while I was missing
the key move that would allow me to progress. It was a nice surprise when I
found it and even then the next part was not obvious. The puzzle does reveal
the inner locking mechanism and that helps you plan the next few moves.
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It's going to be fun putting this back together
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Having disassembled it, then is definitely a fun challenge to scramble the
pieces and then reassemble after the memory of the disassembly has faded.
Great fun! If you love cuboid interlocking puzzles and Alfons' work interests
you then this is a brilliant one for your collection.
Rising Peaks - Everest
This is another of Girish Sharma's amazing interlocking cube creations.
Judging from the name Rising Peaks hyphenated with a mountain name, I
suspect this is the first in a whole series of these puzzles - I certainly
hope so! Beautifully made using Padauk, Wenge, Acacia and Maple, the initial
challenge is to separate the pieces from their travel assembly. Maybe I'm
not very good at puzzles (it does say that all over my website) but I
actually took a good 5 minutes taking it apart. Then obviously you have to
assemble them into a 4x4x4 cube using linear moves only. Many puzzlers have
moved away from solely linear interlocking puzzles but I still love the
standard interlocking puzzles that I first learned about so many years ago
from
Richard Gain. They provide a wonderful challenge and can be quite tough. This one is
absolutely superb.
From the beginning it is very easy to establish the positions of the 4
pieces but actually assembling them is a tremendous fun challenge. Working
out which pieces to use first and which subsequently get inserted is part of
the difficulty. There is no obvious order when looking at the shapes and in
fact the required order was a bit of a surprise to me. At first it's
possible to place any 3 pieces in a promising arrangement but the final one
ain't going nowhere! I spent a good 45 minutes trying various arrangements
of the first 2/3 pieces before I found a sequence that looked promising -
something worthy of Girish' design skills. Once I'd found this start, I
thought I was making progress until miraculously a piece fell out
unexpectedly - I sort of lost track of what I was doing and ended up back at
the beginning. Start again...
Continuing in my search I noticed a possible move that I had missed the
first time and that opened up a whole set of dance moves of the pieces in an
out around each other. The Pelikan team have made this beautifully tight so
the pieces don't flop about and each move has to be made deliberately with
the occasional "thwack" as they settle in to place. I had my cube assembled
in about an hour.
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There is NO spoiler here - the relative positions of the pieces are
really obvious
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Having taken my photos, I then struggled to dismantle the puzzle and put it
back into the storage/travel position. It's a disassembly challenge as well
as an assembly one. I redid it a few hours later and even though I
remembered the vague order of the pieces, it still took me quite a while to
repeat the process.
This is another masterpiece of design and manufacture by Girish and Pelikan.
If you like interlocking puzzles then this should be high on your shopping
list.
Minima Magnetik
My goodness! Is there no end to Frederic's design skills and ideas?? Here we
have yet another wonderful puzzle in the now enormous Minima series. I have
written extensive reviews of
Minima puzzles
over the last couple of years and have to admit that this series is one of
the single most compelling series I have ever played with. I had thought
that Frederic might run out of ideas but there seems to be no sign of it so
far. The Pelikan team have made this version using Jatoba and Acacia woods
with a bunch of magnets. This amazing design looks so simple until you
casually have a play. The usual 2x2x3 box has two entry holes to it and what
looks like some finger-holes as well. Anyone looking at these shapes (1x1x2
sticks) with a hole in one end and another at the front will be able to
think of quite a few ways to get the pieces inside and think this is
simplicity itself. I sort of thought so too until I received the
instructions.
"First place the box on a flat surface.
Pack the pieces inside su that no magnets are visible through any holes
in the box.
Once a piece has been placed in the box, you can not touch or move the
pieces with your fingers or move the box"
Ah! Now we have an entirely new challenge! It is a simple packing but
made challenging by the constraints. The magnets are obviously the key to
manipulating the pieces. To add to the challenge the embedded magnets have
their polarity arranged such that 4 of the pieces have one orientation,
another the opposite way around and one piece has no magnet. First challenge
is to decide which way around the box needs to be placed and then it will be
necessary to use both repulsion and attraction to move the pieces around. If
the pieces are placed through one hole and another piece placed through the
other, then it is quite possible for a diagonal repulsion to occur and
another piece placed to prevent this. There is a whole lot of challenge to
this one.
I worked out an approach after about half an hour of fiddling out of the box
and attempted to do it inside. This taught me that I needed to be very
careful with the exact order that pieces need to be placed. I thought I had
my solution and took this photo:
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No magnets visible but....
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Having been unaware that this design was being made by Jakub, I had ordered
the same puzzle from Tye Stahly's
Nothing Yet Designs store
and had actually received his copy a few days earlier (thanks Allard, for
forwarding it on to me).
I set about doing the same thing with the 3D printed version and, to my horror,
it would not work! The repulsion of the magnets was not quite strong enough to
achieve one of the crucial moves. This could only mean that my initial solution
was not the intended one. It also means that you have two solutions to find if
you buy the Pelikan version of this puzzle. I went back to the drawing board and
have to shamefully admit that it took me another 2 days to find a solution that
would work with both versions. The actual sequence of moves is really quite
involved requiring multiple steps. This is a must have puzzle!
Minima Drawer
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Minima Drawer by Frederic Boucher
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This gorgeous creation is yet another Minima design by Frederic. It is also
another of those must have puzzles. This version has been created using a very
beautiful Leopard wood and Maple and is stunning. It arrives with the box
completely closed and one L shaped piece outside. The drawer of the box can
slide in either direction, although on arrival it can will only go one way and
reveals a number of pieces inside. It's not straightforward removing all the
pieces and requires the drawer to be moved in both directions to progressively
release the pieces. Be careful! It's easy to get stuck!
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Dowels galore! |
Once you have all the pieces, the extent of the challenge becomes clear! There
drawer is prevented from coming out by a one voxel dowel attached to the roof of
the puzzle inside. There is also another one voxel dowel pointing horizontally
inside the drawer. The pieces and extra dowels need to be placed inside the
2x2x3 cavity as usual. Having experienced the minor challenge of removing the
pieces from the transport position, I knew that multiple moves would be required
and sliding the drawer back and forth. Gravity was going to be a key
consideration here. There are a few arrangements that will fit the space given
but it is clear that most are not physically possible. The approach here has to
be to find an assembly and then work backwards to see whether it can be removed
from the box.
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No spoiler - it is solved!
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I think I got somewhat lucky and found the solution after only a whole day of trying but on the way I nearly had a heart attack several times. The limited opening means that some of the pieces need to be rotated into the box and if they are not right or in the right order, they must be removed using the same rotation. Sometimes this can be very hard to achieve and leave you with a huge challenge and worry that you have trapped them inside permanently.
This one is a minima for true puzzle professionals - it is fabulous!
I will be working on the remaining 4 puzzles over the upcoming week and will finish the reviews next Sunday.