Body & Soul2 mins ago
Listener 4269 Journey To The Centre By Ilver
63 Answers
I’m surprised that no one has yet commented on this first-class puzzle. Not the usual numerical but a thoroughly entertaining exercise in logic as well as plenty of clues to solve. Thank you, Ilver.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Another one here marvelling at the construction.
I didn't find the clues all that easy, with the limited amount of checking available. I did guess the theme early on but it took a while for the penny to drop as to what the spelled out instruction meant, and even longer to get the significance of the centre row.
(Contendo - I don't think there is any problem with 24.)
I didn't find the clues all that easy, with the limited amount of checking available. I did guess the theme early on but it took a while for the penny to drop as to what the spelled out instruction meant, and even longer to get the significance of the centre row.
(Contendo - I don't think there is any problem with 24.)
Pressure from other calls on my time means I'm going to have to abandon this; a pity because obviously I'm missing a tour de force to judge by some of the comments here. It's not only the opaque instruction that flummoxes me, I'm also puzzled by the preamble's reference to the four adjacent cells of each grid letter. Assuming diagonally adjoining cells are discounted, most cells do have four adjacent cells, but corner letters have only two, and edge letters have only three.
Bonus quiz for the week: now that we know Andrew G-S was the setter, how did he come up with his pseudonym? Apparently the great Mr Magoo worked it out whilst he was sitting in some sort of executive committee meeting and started giggling to himself ... (if you know, don't just spill the beans, please - let others work it out and giggle likewise). Like the endgame here, it's obvious once you know what to do....
Perseverer, thanks for your offer of a gentle nudge, but an idea came to me while stuck in traffic, and I've started to implement it; my coding system seems to be working out, though nothing clear has yet emerged from the grid.
I often find that when I reach an impasse , the light dawns when I'm nowhere near the puzzle. I just hope this isn't a false dawn. I haven't reached any conflicts in my shading so I'm pretty sure I'm on the right path.
I often find that when I reach an impasse , the light dawns when I'm nowhere near the puzzle. I just hope this isn't a false dawn. I haven't reached any conflicts in my shading so I'm pretty sure I'm on the right path.
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