Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
Listener 4115: Invisible Ink II by Sabre
74 Answers
Invisible Ink was back in 1995, before I started solving the listener, however I have solved a few of Sabre's puzzles, who often uses ciphers and this is no exception.
The grid filling started off well, but there needs to be a lot of cold solving before the decoding can continue. Often I thought "a word can't fit in there", but sure enough there was. 31 down is a tricky clue, one that I had to work backwards to get.
All in all, a nice challenge. Thanks Sabre
The grid filling started off well, but there needs to be a lot of cold solving before the decoding can continue. Often I thought "a word can't fit in there", but sure enough there was. 31 down is a tricky clue, one that I had to work backwards to get.
All in all, a nice challenge. Thanks Sabre
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm not sure I completely understand the preamble - does it say that once you crack the cipher, you apply it to the 21 normal clues to get the 21 "invisible ink" clues? On the other hand how can you begin to crack the cipher until you have solved some of the invisible ink clues? I answered the normal clues easily enough, but it seems clear I do not fully understand what comes next. Time to put on the pondering cap.........
-- answer removed --
-of course daagg, it may just be heat sensitive invisible ink, so anyone who can't get magic markers to work on the missing clues might find the following helpful:
"The writing is rendered visible by heating the paper, either on a radiator, by ironing it, or by placing it in an oven. A 100-watt light bulb is less likely to damage the paper."
After a trudge across fields through the snow I have only just picked up my hardcopy of the Times so have not had the chance to try it yet. I'd be interested to hear if anyone gets it to work.
"The writing is rendered visible by heating the paper, either on a radiator, by ironing it, or by placing it in an oven. A 100-watt light bulb is less likely to damage the paper."
After a trudge across fields through the snow I have only just picked up my hardcopy of the Times so have not had the chance to try it yet. I'd be interested to hear if anyone gets it to work.
I've solved all the clues bar the last 2 downs. This gives me a very distinctive patterns for 5dn, for which there is only one answer, but taking that forward to 8dn gives me no options at all!
Grateful foe the chance to check I'm not going down a blind alley - maybe some kind soul could drop me a line at [email protected]
Grateful foe the chance to check I'm not going down a blind alley - maybe some kind soul could drop me a line at [email protected]
Hmmm. Snow outside and cold solving inside -- it's all too much for me. I can only see one possibility for 5d, and then I can only see one possibility each for 4d and 8d, but then my theory breaks down when after appropriate encoding of 1d, 2d and 3d I can't make a word at 14a, so it's going onto the back burner for a while.
I agree with your sentiments Andrew - and I usually enjoy a bit of coding. Having said that in order for the solution to be unambiguous, I see why so many obscure words are required. A marvellous feat of construction, but not the most enjoyable solve - too much looking up for my liking. I'd be interested to see the original Invisible Ink, if only to see how the construction has changed with the advent of electronic aids.