ChatterBank0 min ago
Listener 4209 City Crossing Tour by Merlin
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Grid fill was not too bad and I have the location name and the famous puzzle. Am in the middle of finding the various thematic elements, not sure whether I will press on tonight or have a break until tomorrow. Anyway fun so far so thanks Merlin. Have a sneaky suspicion that I will not be the first poster but have missed the thread. No doubt will be redirected!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Like RR I spotted the gimmick before solving any clues, but this didn't detract from the pleasure in filling the grid - perhaps the title was too generous? But I'm now facing the problem of not knowing whether I have located all the items. Are there perhaps fewer than in the original puzzle? It would have been useful to have been told - after all, who is to say that a rum collection of 3 or 4 letters isn't an arcane example in some far-off spot?
The exact nature of the problem just hit me - I was puzzling over the apparently random nature of the corrections to the down clues, but in a nice pdm I've got the place and the name, so I know what to do. Back when I was younger this was one of my favourite problems, who knows why, but there you go. I'm again short of some key equipment so will have to get round to finishing this later.
In other news, I'm pretty sure I made a stupid error in the highlighting of 4206 that'll cost me a precious correct. Shame, that.
In other news, I'm pretty sure I made a stupid error in the highlighting of 4206 that'll cost me a precious correct. Shame, that.
The trouble with wordsearches is that you can come up with the odd word or two which the setter (probably) didn't intend. To solve this, I've had to discard at least one element, and only the absence of OCD in my soul prevents me from looking for more. I've found it helps (a lot) to understand and fulfil the first instruction, though if I were in full grump mode, I might suggest there are alternative responses which might make you feel "I've done that". Good crossword solve, interesting theme which my brain gets confused about, reasonably satisfying, if tentative, solution.
This was a nice twist on a classic puzzle but I am mystified by suggestions here that in this case there might be 'unintended' thematic objects. The number is fixed not only by a knowledge of the original puzzle but also the ingenious method that Merlin has used to identify the middle component of the across instruction - this in turn makes the extra object harder to spot at first. The final path is far from arbitrary starwalker - it's the only one that avoids self-crossing.
Z Cup for me, I'm afraid as theme was made too obvious by title and first sentence of preamble, gridfill was fairly unchallenging, and endgame to my mind not satisfactory even if it does raise a smile which is more than I can muster at present when distracted by the European "golfers" some of whom look like they play off 18.... Bah, humbug! Anyhow, I still thank Merlin for the amusement and admire his nifty construction and some clever surface readings (for me, the stand-out was 18a, but that maybe explains my mood!).
OK required twist found, and believe I have a solution that meets all the prerequisites of the preamble, though have based this on a somewhat liberal interpretation of the lack of constraints around the continuous line. Based on the posts from Mysterons and starwalker though, sure there is a final PDM awaiting. Will leave for now and come back to this later.
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