Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
Listener 4168, Phiz by Bero
50 Answers
So, no Friday finishes on this one. Me neither: perhaps I really am slipping.
I'm really struggling to get enthused about this: it looks like a lot of cold solving and then a letters jigsaw. I don't think it gives anything away to note that 3, for example, has four turns that I can see, in any direction and not counting bumping into the edge, which creates a very large number of alternatives - too many to enter anything with certainty even with some checkers around. The only letters you can actually enter are the first ones. I struggle with knight moves, but these are king moves (minus diagonals) in three dimensions. It must all work out, I suppose, but at the moment I'm underwhelmed and unlikely to push through. Perhaps others could let us know whether it yields before you've solved all the clues independently.
I'm really struggling to get enthused about this: it looks like a lot of cold solving and then a letters jigsaw. I don't think it gives anything away to note that 3, for example, has four turns that I can see, in any direction and not counting bumping into the edge, which creates a very large number of alternatives - too many to enter anything with certainty even with some checkers around. The only letters you can actually enter are the first ones. I struggle with knight moves, but these are king moves (minus diagonals) in three dimensions. It must all work out, I suppose, but at the moment I'm underwhelmed and unlikely to push through. Perhaps others could let us know whether it yields before you've solved all the clues independently.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Zabadak. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well to disagree with the above, for me this has been top notch. It is certainly possible to fit in answers as you go along and use these to work out other answers (ie not a cold solve) and the multitude of PDMs this yields as the jigsaw fits together is great. There are also some obvious gimmes in terms of entries which clearly need to cross. Three clues to go and what appears to be a predictable finish emerging (I hope!). Many thanks BeRo so far - fabulous.
All finished with the end as predicted - I really recommend persevering, I think this was excellent! Happy Christmas everyone - I am off on hols for Christmas and don't know if I will be able to post next week. Quite a year for the Listener with some tough ones over the last month or so. I see that Zabadak starting this thread was ensuring that he took home the Z Cup for the year!! Congrats
I am a bit surprised at all the negative comments - I didn't find this too bad. Like Trux I couldn't help thinking about "Fuzzy Duck" (an adult drinking game from what I remember). Managed to cold solve all but 3 initially. What held me up was putting 6 and 9 in the grid in the wrong places (there are an awful lot of permutations I agree). Don't think I'll bother with the option though.
Very cleverly constructed to give a unique solution with a good standard of clueing but way too much cold solving required for my taste, reading other comments makes me wonder if I should have made more effort fitting answers in before I’d solved all bar one of the clues. I too was expecting something completely different when I saw the title. I wonder if next week’s offering will be festive. Merry Christmas.
Agreed about the setter's skill (and also about the necessary cold solving being a bit excessive). I think it would be better if, as is often the case, the number of cells to be transferred to the fourth diagram had been given (as the number to be highlighted last week was given). I have 7, but 6 would make a much better "phiz".
I am making slow progress but there is one thing that I would like to ask. It concerns how letters are shared amongst clues. In a 'normal' two-dimensional grid a letter can be shared by two clues and three in a 'normal' three-dimensional grid. But what about here where clues aren't in straight lines? For example, if the grid includes the letters Q and U in adjacent cells, can these be parts of more than one entry such as 'inquest' and 'query'?
Please don't answer if you think that this might give too much away.
Please don't answer if you think that this might give too much away.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.