Quizzes & Puzzles10 mins ago
Listener No4341 What's On By Nod
48 Answers
This has produced a giggle but it was a tough solve until the message appeared and we are going to have to be very careful with our checking of our final grid. What an amusing and original idea. Many thanks, Nod!
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An entertaining puzzle, but I think the device has appeared in various guises before -- perhaps not so all-pervasively. A clever way, though, of diminishing the usefulness of intersecting lights. Good clues, with many of the inserted words well disguised. Puzzling over the title took up more time than it should have. Many thanks, Nod.
An entertaining puzzle, but I think the device has appeared in various guises before -- perhaps not so all-pervasively. A clever way, though, of diminishing the usefulness of intersecting lights. Good clues, with many of the inserted words well disguised. Puzzling over the title took up more time than it should have. Many thanks, Nod.
With all the cold-solving I'd had the PDM about four hours ago and since then it's been something of a grin to fill in all the gaps. Last one plugged in just now. Thanks Nod.
I think a similar idea appeared in the Magpie last year, but since I didn't do that particular puzzle I can't say I'm complaining.
I think a similar idea appeared in the Magpie last year, but since I didn't do that particular puzzle I can't say I'm complaining.
Jim, I think I know what you meant to say. This is far from being 'something of a grin' for me and has brought on one of my personality changes.
It's all very well having the occasional puzzle that's impossible to begin without a Herculean amount of cold-solving, but after doing that with 20 clues, working out the hint on a balance of probabilities and getting 17 entries into the grid, I thought I'd see how everyone else was getting on.
As I feared, the hard slog has only just begun, with more cold-solving to 'look forward' to, perhaps enlivened by a bit of reverse-solving. It's clearly a work of genius, but I much prefer the PDM(s) to come a lot later than this.
It's all very well having the occasional puzzle that's impossible to begin without a Herculean amount of cold-solving, but after doing that with 20 clues, working out the hint on a balance of probabilities and getting 17 entries into the grid, I thought I'd see how everyone else was getting on.
As I feared, the hard slog has only just begun, with more cold-solving to 'look forward' to, perhaps enlivened by a bit of reverse-solving. It's clearly a work of genius, but I much prefer the PDM(s) to come a lot later than this.
Something of a grind, I meant of course!
It is a bit of a shame, as the idea is a nice one and I shudder to think how much work must have gone into putting it all together. All the same, with very little checking (and indeed at least one sneaky pitfall!) it has felt rather like solving 36 separate clues, some of them very, very tough, and then putting a grid together from the results afterwards.
It is a bit of a shame, as the idea is a nice one and I shudder to think how much work must have gone into putting it all together. All the same, with very little checking (and indeed at least one sneaky pitfall!) it has felt rather like solving 36 separate clues, some of them very, very tough, and then putting a grid together from the results afterwards.
As an alternative to this week's torment, may I recommend this month's puzzle in Oxford Today? CAM receives frequent plugs here, so it's only fair, although entries to OT are allowed only from alumni.
The setter is John Higgs: does anyone know if he sets elsewhere under a pseudonym? The puzzle is guaranteed to provide an amusing (and still arguably topical) PDM in the final stage of the endgame, where it should be. Here's the link:
http:// www.oxf ordtoda y.ox.ac .uk/com mon-roo m/cross word-%E 2%80%94 -april- 2015
The setter is John Higgs: does anyone know if he sets elsewhere under a pseudonym? The puzzle is guaranteed to provide an amusing (and still arguably topical) PDM in the final stage of the endgame, where it should be. Here's the link:
http://
A very clever construction, but surely only barely a crossword. Each checked square leads to 19 options, which, to me, does not amount to "checking". Of course there can be back-analysis, but that is a bigger slog than most, as folk are saying. And, speaking as an utter non-expert in this area, even I know that the hint uses the wrong term. Grumpy, this week - blood pressure
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