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Minima puzzles no 5 to 12 |
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Number 1 to 4 |
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Minima 5 - Limba and Bubinga
Minima 6 - Ash and Ovangkol
Minima 7 - Wenge and Maple
Minima 8 - Ovangkol and Zebrano
Minima 9 - Acacia, Padauk and Wenge
Minima 10 - Zebrano, Purpleheart and Maple
Minima 11 - Merbau and Padauk
Minima 12 - Bubinga and Acacia
Obviously, like the rest of the Minima puzzles, the aim is to pack the
pieces into the box and leave it so that no gaps are visible through either
the large holes, small finger holes or slots that facilitate rotational
moves (if the number of voxels is less than the 12 that would completely
fill the box). Continuing with the pathway that the first four took, these
get progressively more difficult but are always very fun to solve. The
rotations are beautifully facilitated by the various holes and slots cut
into the box and no force is needed. Some of the rotations are really quite
tricky to work out and in several puzzles there are multiple rotations for
one piece. As before, the wooden box makes the challenge much more difficult
as you cannot see what is happening inside once a piece or two have been
placed. I had not managed to solve Minima 8 in the acrylic box version
despite months of trying
after receiving them in September last year. Minima 8 doesn't look like too much of a
challenge with 3 simple L-shaped tri-ominos and a single 3 voxel straight
stick but there I had huge problems with it and was gratified when a couple
of correspondents agreed that it was a really difficult puzzle.
Minima 9 and 10 are slightly different having pieces of 2 colours and whilst
packing is the aim, the difference is that with Minima 9 the puzzler has to
place them so that only one of the colours is visible through the holes in
the box (for that one there are 2 solutions - one for each colour).
Interestingly, I found one colour quite a bit harder than the other. Minima
10 has only one solution and needs to have only the vibrant Purpleheart
visible from outside of the box. Minima 11 and 12 are very deceptive having
relatively simple pieces and quite a lot of large holes in the box but they
are also a huge challenge - almost as difficult as number 8. They both took
me 2 or 3 days to solve but at least not the several months of the
former.
These puzzles are so much fun and this explains why I have a
HUGE collection
of these Minima puzzles of varying types and from various designers.
Basically I will purchase any of them when released to add to my
collection. I would say that these are ESSENTIAL purchases for
anyone seriously into packing puzzles - they are stunningly beautiful and
a fabulous challenge and the Pelikan team have made them so well!
Empire
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Empire by Jorgos Anastasou |
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Bottom view |
Reassembly required me to have a lot of fun with Burrtools but I think that those of you who remembered your pathway might manage without it and the genii amongst you might just manage to put it together from scratch.
Jorgos is really designing some fantastic puzzles and I am so pleased that Jakub is agreeing to make them available to us in such fancy woods. This one will look stunning on display in your collection.
XIII was also released by Osho.
ReplyDeleteNice write-up. I look forward to the adding more to my collection.
Yes, I think I was aware of that but I got a very special version direct from Frederic
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