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Showing posts with label Tanner Reyes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tanner Reyes. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 31, 2024

SPLIT ASUNDER, RE – CONNECTING CUB3S

This puzzle is cubular dude!  Albeit a bit broken.  

You might be able to determine the number of cubes from the name of the puzzle.  Each of the cubes is split in twain and your mission is to reform the cubes asunder.  There are also some rectangular tubular pieces to be cached in rectangular receptacles of the cubic halves, each half having half of a whole hole.  Magnets were also added to make this a very attractive puzzle.  

This puzzle was designed by Tanner Rayes, that famous celebrity from the YouTube show What Did I Get Myself Into? and used as his exchange puzzle for IPP41.  New episodes of W.D.I.G.M.I.? have been temporarily put on hold for the development cycle of this puzzle, but I’d expect them to restart again after Tanner and his co-hostess Geneva open their new studio.

When I first saw the pieces for CONNECTING CUB3S, I was immediately reminded of the Impossible Triangle of Three Cubes puzzle by Andrey Ustjuzhanin and thought it would have a similar solution.  It didn’t, so forget that I mentioned it.

Tanner 3D printed the CONNECTING CUB3S himself and they came in a sturdy plastic box for storage.  The cubular pieces were black and the tubular pieces were Red, White, and Blue, keeping in theme with IPP41 which was held in the US.
 
Although constructing the attractive tri-cubular-cached-tubular shape was not difficult, the though process was enjoyable.  To be honest, I think that I found it easy because I had a good guess what the target shape would be.  For less experienced puzzles, it may provide more of a challenge.  My biggest problem was 2 pieces not wanting to go nicely together.  This was due to a rogue magnet that crashed the party and was hanging out with a buddy in one of the hole halves.  Once it was removed, the pieces slide nicely together.

I ended up laughing during the second challenge, which is to place the pieces back in the box.  I thought I would be able to just dump the pieces back in, but it required placing them inside with a little thought.  Not difficult, but you can’t just drop them in either.

Altogether, a nice package from W.D.I.G.M.I.? H.Q.

Wednesday, February 22, 2023

? – W.D.I.G.M.I.

This year’s Christmas present from my friends Tanner and Geneva over at What Did I Get Myself Into HQ was, surprise – a W.D.I.G.M.I. puzzle.  In a recent puzzle gathering, everyone who had a copy confessed to not having solved it.  This inspired me to reshuffle my life priorities to get this one checked off.

W.D.I.G.M.I. was designed and made by Tanner in collaboration with Tye Stahly from NothingYet Designs.  The puzzle is a 2D restricted-opening packing puzzle made from acrylic.  The frame is in the shape of the question mark and made with smoky translucent top and bottom and a black middle layer for sides.  There are 3 openings in the frame but only the largest will admit the pieces.  The other 2 are to there to help move the pieces.  

In addition to the frame, there are 7 pieces made from opaque purple acrylic and represent the characters: W, D, I, G, M, I, and ?.  I particularly liked that it was based on a triangular framework, instead of a rectangular one.  Anyone familiar with Tanner should not be surprised that the color purple was chosen for the pieces.  Usually Tanner bends the phrase What Did I Get Myself Into so that it forms a question mark, but thankfully, we only have to pack the first letter of each word along with a question mark into the frame.

Now that I’ve made it seem easy, it’s not.  When I opened it on Christmas, I quickly found how the pieces could fit in the frame, but it was not possible to put them in the frame in that configuration.  And then almost as quickly, I realized that this was not going to be a trivial challenge.  I don’t want to provide any spoilers, but I will say that I spent most of the time determining how the pieces related to each other and how they could be nestled together in different places within the frame.  Once the proper assembly is found, inserting the pieces is straight-forward.

I can neither confirm nor deny if there is a sole solution or whether multiple solutions exist.  However, I can confirm that finding a solution was a challenge.

Tanner and Geneva are on a mission to spread puzzle joy to the world and I’m looking forward to seeing what they do next.