Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Listener No 4471 What Can The Matter Be? By Flying Tortoise
24 Answers
With quite a bit of surprise and head scratching, we have a full grid. It took a lucky early spotting of the theme to speed our solve up enormously. I thought this was quite challenging. Thank you, Flying Tortoise.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I found this more fiddly than a violin concerto, but it all came together nicely in the end with no ambiguities or grid staring. A lucky guess at the theme, and therefore the letters to go in the circles, helped to put the quadrants in order. I actually thought there was a clue missing for a while because although I'd solved it I forgot to enter the answer in the grid. Duh.
Quite a few easy clues, then some more challenging ones where the misprints, extra or missing letters were very skilfully handled, leading to several pdm's. I saw the theme early enough to make selecting the quadrant for a given set fairly straightforward.
However, I must be missing something, as I don't see the thematic basis for resolving ambiguities in the quadrant with no down entries. I can see how they probably should be entered, but don't see that as a thematic justification.
However, I must be missing something, as I don't see the thematic basis for resolving ambiguities in the quadrant with no down entries. I can see how they probably should be entered, but don't see that as a thematic justification.
Given that you can precisely place two of the entries in the quadrant under discussion, I can only see one logical arrangement for the other four entries?
Agreed it isn't spelled out in the pre-ramble, but then none of the entry methods for the other three quadrants are fully detailed either - they are all just "if it fits, it's right"?
Agreed it isn't spelled out in the pre-ramble, but then none of the entry methods for the other three quadrants are fully detailed either - they are all just "if it fits, it's right"?
Osirun, perhaps you were implying that I'd failed to see that one order is "more pleasing" than others. I thought I'd made it clear that I saw a rationale, but that per se doesn't make it necessarily right, unless there is a thematic reason. The preamble didn't ask for a consistent pattern of entries in that quadrant. It just seems a bit odd to me.
Some excellent clues of varying levels of difficulty and despite spotting the theme fairly early we struggled with the SGF.
We are convinced that there is a deducible thematic justification for the way that all the answers are entered and will await some higher intellect to explain it in due course.
We are convinced that there is a deducible thematic justification for the way that all the answers are entered and will await some higher intellect to explain it in due course.
A fine puzzle, yes, with some nice clues. But a "crossword"? Hardly. I think it was only in the last two or three clues that I had any assistance from the grid - otherwise all cold solving. Like others, I found the relationship of the construction to the theme eludes me. And the letter in the last clue surely makes the last thematic item somewhat different from the others.
I found this really very tough - more so than everyone else seems to have done! I thought it was an enjoyable puzzle. I share Scorpius's uncertainty about part of the implementation of the theme, but even so, I enjoyed the way everything came together in the end. Some tough, well-crafted clues on the way.
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