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Wednesday, April 15, 2026

3-Pronged Puzzling Approach – TritanIC Series (1-6)

TritanIC Puzzle Series by Andrew Crowell

A short while ago, just over 5 years, I reviewed a set of 3-piece 4x4x4 Turning Interlocking Cubes (TICs) designed by Andrew Crowell (Puzzle Candy - ThreeTIC, TriadTIC, TripleTIC, NeuroTIC, TriumviraTIC).  These TICs provided quick enjoyable solves to brighten the day.  Recently, a kind soul on the Mechanical Puzzle Discord (MPD) passed on another set of Andrew’s 3-piece TICs that I was more than happy to accept, but this time a 5x5x5 format.

The 6 TritanIC puzzles were designed by Andrew Crowell and like the prior 3-piece TICs, they provide a quick shot of TIC adrenaline to help get through the day.  I managed to hold myself back and do 1 a day over 6 days instead of binging them all in one sitting.
  

TritanIC
TritanIC


TritanIC, which I assume is the first of the series since it lacks a posterior numerical designator, is a nice start to ease you into the series.  One piece has more volume than the other 2 proclaiming itself as the base for adding the other 2 pieces.  The solution requires 1 straight forward rotation.  At least one other nice rotation is possible but not required and it made me wonder if it would be possible to alter the design to require it. 


TritanIC 2
TritanIC 2


I found TritanIC 2 to be twice as hard and then some as TritanIC.  I took this as a good sign that we were on a good trajectory.  TritanIC 2 has everything you would want in a 3-piece TIC where pieces have to added in orientations far from where they need to end up.  Determining how to simply put the 2 largest pieces together is not a gimme and takes some thought.  And trying to add the smallest piece to the mix is a challenge.


TritanIC 3

TritanIC 3


TritanIC 3 is a nice follow-up to TritanIC 2.  There are some nice rotations that have to be navigated to get the pieces in place before they collapse into a cube.  And you are almost guaranteed to have to back up and rethink the ordering of the pieces.




TritanIC 4

TritanIC 4


This is where the trajectory falls apart.  I found this one to be extremely easier.  Less than 2 minutes easy.  If you acquire the series, you may want to start with this one.  The most difficult part is getting the first 2 pieces together, which isn’t that difficult.  The third piece just flops in place before it it closed.  This one didn’t stand up compared to the others in the series.


TritanIC 5

TritanIC 5


TritanIC 5 gets things back on track.  In fact, it reminded me a lot of TritanIC 3 in terms of approach, rotations, and how the pieces go together.  It’s certainly it’s own puzzle, but has the same overall feel as TritanIC 3.




TritanIC 6

TritanIC 6


I found TritanIC 6 to be a tricky bugger.  Multiple rotations are required to get the pieces into position before they can start moving into place.  In fact, a few days later, it was non-trivial to determine how the pieces came apart.  A nice way to end the series!




Expanded But Not disassembled




Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Stuffing Puzzles – Xmas Stocking

Xmas Stocking by Osanori Yamamoto
I’ve seen references to the Xmas Stocking puzzle recently that caused my mind to wander a bit.  Since all the pieces were identical and packed in a fairly small box, I was wondering if I could solve it without having the puzzle.  After several minutes of determining how the pieces would need to be oriented due to the opening and rotation restrictions, I was able to visualize some assemblies but not how the pieces could be placed in the box.  I eventually resorted to using a piece of paper to map out the possible assemblies with no further luck.  It’s possible that this is one of those puzzles that requires some assistance like larger tolerances or beveling.  I was about to move on when I remembered that I had received some LEGOized hand-me-down puzzles from a generous soul on the Mechanical Puzzle Discord (MPD) server and sure enough, there it was.

Xmas Stocking is a 3D restricted-opening packing puzzle designed by Osanori Yamamoto.  It consists of 5 identical Z tetracubes that have to be placed in a 2x3x4 box with 2.5 voxels on the top closed off.  The triangular half-square is there to restrict pieces from moving through that square while forcing the voxel underneath to be occupied – assuming that the opening needs to appear completely filled.  I was unable to find verification of that requirement, but these types of puzzles seem to require that and it turned out to be the case for this puzzle.

Xmas Stocking Filled But Not Filled
Most of the 3D LEGO packing puzzles that I recently received came solved.  However, since they are made from LEGO bricks, you can simply rip off the bottom and dump the pieces without seeing how they are arranged or how they come out.   The LEGO bricks used to make the box also included portholes to view the interior of the box, but they are not needed to solve the puzzle.  

Being made from LEGO bricks, you know that there are no rotations that can occur with loose tolerances or bevels unless very specific pieces are used or they are doctored in some way.  Armed with that assumption, I tested the pieces and could get no further than my pencil and paper analysis.  Yes, of course I realized that I was operating with a bad assumption somewhere but was having a difficult time identifying what it was.  And then I dropped a single piece in the box and it bounced it’s way into an orientation that I had thought was impossible.  Apparently, the Z tetracube has a nice property that gives it a possible rotation that I had not thought of.  Now that the secret was out, it only took a couple of minutes to get all 5 Z tetracubes nestled within the box.

I don’t know if it was intentional, but the LEGO version did have the interesting property of still being apparently filled even with all those holes.

Epic Mail Call
Mail Call




Wednesday, April 1, 2026

April’s First Puzzle – Smelling of (M̶)Bums

Smelling of (M̶)Bums

Spring has sprung and the backyard is once again filled with the sounds of crows screaming Ka-Ka all day long.  All this cacaphony tilted my brain, dumping future puzzle ideas into the cesspool of my mind where thoughts of the recent rash of geometric dissection puzzles started to float to the top. 

Last year, one of the 2 brass monkeys dropped a puzzle on the community (New Puzzle Comes Out – Smelling Of Roses)  that is now developing into a series.  My goal was to develop the second of those droppings.  And a solid #2 at that. 

We all spend too much time running around to no avail.  So I wanted to design a puzzle where you could avoid the runs, take a sit, and solve a puzzle.  A puzzle for everyone.  Even the naysayers who proclaim: Puzzles?  We don’t need no stinkin puzzles! 

I decided that I had to bring this puzzle to life.  It’s my duty!

Intentionally Crappy Pieces
Design

Sometimes I have puzzle ideas up the wazoo, sometimes I have to work at it, and sometimes both.  I put myself under a lot of pressure to come up with this design but initially nothing was emerging.  Then, when I was sitting on my porcelain thinking chair straining to bring to light a brilliant puzzle idea, it just materialized out of nowhere.  What a relief!

To start the design process, I took one of my cubic dissection puzzle designs and decided to muck around with it.  I decided it needed to have a crapazoid shape resulting from a crapazoidal projection of a diminishing cylinder in a polar coordinate system.  It turns out that crapazoidal math is exceedingly complex and it’s very difficult to determine the feci of the curves.  But I persevered and created the optimum crapazoidal dissection.  It’s always nice to have another design in the can!  According to the Hordern-Dalgety puzzle taxonomy, it’s classified as an ASS puzzle.  

I did a data dump on it and it turns out to be a level 5.5.3.3.3.3 with 4 of those movements being rotational.  It’s certainly not one of those boring watered down NM-ary challenges. 

I originally decided to name it Smelling of Mums along the series theme but that M eventually evolved into a B.

Testing

Once I had the initial design, I went through several prototypes.  Halfway through the design process, I had a brain fart and lost my momentum.  The first 2 versions were complete failures but the turd one was a success.  The most difficult part was determining the oder of the pieces to be added to the assembly. 

Piece of Crap
Piece of Crap
Production 

Now it was time to get down to business.  I was originally planing to make it out of coprolite but using FDM where everything gets built from the bottom was much cheaper.  I also elected to go with a single color to avoid overtaxing the poop chute.

Unfortunately, Smelling of (M̶)Bums is a PITA to make and production is limited. I can only make one a day and sometimes the assembly line backs up.  Eventually, I got in the groove and I had the runs coming out like clockwork. 

Sales

I didn’t think that there would be any interest in such a complex puzzle but puzzlers are descending on this one like a business of flies as if it’s their duty.  I design great puzzles and people tell me: That looks fantastic but I’m not buying puzzles right now.  I make a piece of crap and I get: That puzzle looks like it stinks.  I’ll take 2 please!
 

Distribution

When you’re dealing with piles of puzzles or vice versa, you need to settle on a shitting service to get them in the hands of puzzlers. They’re all shippy, but you need some means of leaving little packages in front of houses.  Hopefully customs won’t require retaining a duty.  At least I don’t have to worry about them getting damaged along the way since they’re very turdy.
 

Conclusion

In the end, I was happy to create the puzzle.  It is comprised of several awesome movements and tolerances are dead on.  Everything slides nicely, slick as … what you’d expect.  Although I was initially worried about the theme, I was given some good advice a long time ago – Make your business, Your business!  After all these decades, I finally get it. 

Although I always try to make puzzles that look like something you want to have in your hands, this one may not be that puzzle.  It also turned out that it wasn’t the puzzle to entice my NPSO.  She reminded me once again that she won’t take any crap from me.

It may be a while before my next puzzle. I’m all pooped out. 

  

Puzzle Dump
Uh Oh!