Kid on the D train with a dodecahedron puzzle cube.
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Kid on the D train with a dodecahedron puzzle cube. (Think a rubik's cube with 12 faces and 11 facets on each face.)
I'm watching him mess with it thinking he's just playing, but then I realize he's doing a solving algorithm.
That kid's going to show up after break speed-solving a megaminx and I'm frankly a little jealous.
(I was probably staring too much but if you don't want me to stare at you on the train don't wave a colorful platonic solid in my face.)
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Kid on the D train with a dodecahedron puzzle cube. (Think a rubik's cube with 12 faces and 11 facets on each face.)
I'm watching him mess with it thinking he's just playing, but then I realize he's doing a solving algorithm.
That kid's going to show up after break speed-solving a megaminx and I'm frankly a little jealous.
(I was probably staring too much but if you don't want me to stare at you on the train don't wave a colorful platonic solid in my face.)
Honestly it's "jangles keys" level at that point.
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Honestly it's "jangles keys" level at that point.
Very obvious trap in the woods baited with several interesting johnson solids... and me caught looking very annoyed.
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Kid on the D train with a dodecahedron puzzle cube. (Think a rubik's cube with 12 faces and 11 facets on each face.)
I'm watching him mess with it thinking he's just playing, but then I realize he's doing a solving algorithm.
That kid's going to show up after break speed-solving a megaminx and I'm frankly a little jealous.
(I was probably staring too much but if you don't want me to stare at you on the train don't wave a colorful platonic solid in my face.)
@futurebird I have one of those, and it's good fun.
One interesting thing I've found: you can produce a consistent solution with any global rotation of all corners, and of all edges. (i.e. take the set of all corners, and rotate it as a whole).
The same is not true of the cube -- you end up with a parity error in some cases.
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@futurebird I have one of those, and it's good fun.
One interesting thing I've found: you can produce a consistent solution with any global rotation of all corners, and of all edges. (i.e. take the set of all corners, and rotate it as a whole).
The same is not true of the cube -- you end up with a parity error in some cases.
@futurebird A consequence of this: The white, pink and light blue faces are equally spaced around one vertex. So there is a permutation of the puzzle where there are three faces with the trans flag colours on, in different permutations. (Rotate all the corners 120° around a specific vertex, and all the edges 240° around the same vertex).
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