ChatterBank0 min ago
Listener 4530 Gallery By Phi
20 Answers
A novel way to make use of a circular grid, which all fell neatly into place. I made rather heavy weather of the ring clues, often losing my place when trying to follow the entries round the grid. Perhaps this was due to the necessary omission of dividing lines?
Great stuff, though for me Phi's best puzzle for a long time was his recent IQ puzzle "The Magic of Opera" (but as my username suggests, I'm biased!).
Great stuff, though for me Phi's best puzzle for a long time was his recent IQ puzzle "The Magic of Opera" (but as my username suggests, I'm biased!).
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think that an absolutely literal interpretation of the relevant sentence in the preamble leads to 16 locations, and I'll admit that the ambiguity didn't occur to me when I calculated the totals. It's hard to say whether the specified number is there to clear up the ambiguity, or whether this is an uncharacteristic oversight by the Listener team. My money's on the former, but like others I'm glad I don't submit my solutions!
Like all radial puzzles this was a pig to get started on - but once the clues began to slot in it got progressively easier - the final 25% was almost trivial by comparison with my early struggles.
I don't submit - so the arguments about counting holes can be cheerfully ignored chez SD - I'll maybe stick with the MMMM in Blackburn, Lancashire?
Thanks Phi - a tough one.
I don't submit - so the arguments about counting holes can be cheerfully ignored chez SD - I'll maybe stick with the MMMM in Blackburn, Lancashire?
Thanks Phi - a tough one.
Not every radial has the magic letter, and therefore I can see no way of knowing whether the occurrence of the letter in the ambiguous cells belongs to one, or other, or both of the relevant radials. After reading and reflecting on comments here and on CSF I accept that there are two possible totals. Arriving at either shows a correct completion of the grid and understanding of the theme, so I'm not really bothered about proving one is right and the other isn't. This whole issue has led me to re-evaluate the puzzle which, while still entertaining and clever, could have had a better preamble.
I echo most of the above, but I'm going to score it by common sense, not on preamble semantics. This approach usually makes for around 5 incorrectly submitted puzzles per year, however. Oh well.
Thanks Phi - a clever construction, but I didn't really enjoy the amount of cold solving required to get started.
Thanks Phi - a clever construction, but I didn't really enjoy the amount of cold solving required to get started.
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