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randomly placing the coloured stickers on the cube, but not all of these can be achieved by manipulating the cube rotations. Similarly, not all the combinations that are mechanically possible from a disassembled cube are possible by manipulation of the puzzle. Since neither unpeeling the stickers nor disassembling the cube is an allowed operation, the possible operations of rotating various faces limit what can be achieved.
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configuration, the configuration of the fused pieces is given in brackets. Thus, (as a simple regular cuboid example) a 2(2,2)x2(2,2)x2(2,2) is a 2×2×2 puzzle, but it was made by fusing a 4×4×4 puzzle. Puzzles which are constructed in this way are often called "bandaged" cubes. However, there are many irregular cuboids that have not (and often could not) be made by bandaging.
1493:, mentioned that Sudoku fans who felt like they had mastered the original paper version of the puzzle were interested in the new product. The product was originally launched in the US and then sold internationally, exporting to Spain, France, South Africa and the United Kingdom. Shortly after release, there were several imitator products sold on
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Rubik's Clock is a two-sided puzzle, each side presenting nine clocks to the puzzler. There are four wheels, one at each corner of the puzzle, each allowing the corresponding corner clock to be rotated directly. There are also four pins next to the center clock, which control the rotation of the four
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Mechanically identical to the standard 3×3×3 cube, but with specially printed stickers for displaying the date. Much easier to solve since five of the six faces are ignored. Ideal produced a commercial version during the initial cube craze. Sticker sets are also available for converting a normal cube
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The Sudoku Cube was invented by veteran toy maker Jay
Horowitz, a puzzle inventor who primarily reproduced older toys for the collectibles market. Horowitz first encountered the original Sudoku puzzle when a woman sitting next to him on a plane ride explained it to him. After being introduced to the
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pieces are then added, either modified from standard puzzles or made from scratch. The four shown here are only a sample from a very large number of examples. Those with two or three different numbers of even or odd rows also have the ability to change their shape. The Tower Cube was manufactured by
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The mechanical construction of the puzzle will usually define the rules by which the combination of pieces can be altered. This leads to some limitations on what combinations are possible. For instance, in the case of the Rubik's Cube, there are a large number of combinations that can be achieved by
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Mechanically identical to the 3×3×3 cube. It does, however, have an interesting difference in its solution. The vertical corner columns are different colours to the faces and do not match the colours of the vertical face columns. The corner columns can therefore be placed in any corner. On the face
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A rotating piece puzzle. Some rank its difficulty very high compared to complex 3D puzzles. There are other versions of this puzzle type including "Mini", "Pocket" and "Super", which have 2, 3 and 10 intersecting circles. There is an "Upgrade" mod which splits some of the large pieces into smaller
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A variation on the original Rubik's Cube where it can be turned in such a manner as to distort the cubical shape of the puzzle. The Square One consists of three layers. The upper and lower layers contain kite and triangular pieces. The middle layer contains two trapezoid pieces, which together may
2018:
While appearing more difficult than the Skewb
Diamond, it is functionally very similar to the Skewb and Skewb Diamond. The puzzle is cut in a different manner but the same solutions can be used to solve it by identifying what pieces are equivalent. Because faces of the Skewb Diamond correspond to
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An irregular cuboid, in the context of this article, is a cuboid puzzle where not all the pieces are the same size in edge length. This category of puzzle is often made by taking a larger regular cuboid puzzle and fusing together some of the pieces to make larger pieces. In the formulae for piece
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Siamese cubes are two or more puzzles that are fused so that some pieces are common to both cubes. The picture here shows two 3×3×3 cubes that have been fused. The largest example known to exist is in The Puzzle Museum and consists of three 5×5×5 cubes that are siamese fused 2×2×5 in two places.
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The inner circles of a Crazy cube 4x4x4 move with the second layer of each face. On a crazy cube type I, they are internally connected in such a way that they essentially move as 8 distinct pieces, not 24. To solve such a cube, think of it as a 2x2x2 (pocket cube) trapped inside a 4x4x4 (Rubik's
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There are many puzzles which are mechanically identical to the regular cuboids listed above but have variations in the pattern and colour of design. Some of these are custom made in very small numbers, sometimes for promotional events. The ones listed in the table below are included because the
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This is the 4-dimensional analog of a cube and thus cannot actually be constructed. However, it can be drawn or represented by a computer. Significantly more difficult to solve than the standard cube, although the techniques follow much the same principles. There are many other sizes of virtual
685:. Each rotating side is usually marked with different colours, intended to be scrambled, then solved by a sequence of moves that sort the facets by colour. Generally, combination puzzles also include mathematically defined examples that have not been, or are impossible to, physically construct.
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Mechanically identical to the standard 3×3×3 cube. The pattern, which is often a promotional logo or pictures of performers, will usually have the effect of making the orientation of the centre pieces 'count' in the solution. The solution is therefore the same as the 'Magic Square' cube above.
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which owned molds. Horowitz worked for a month until he figured out how to combine the two puzzles together, and then when he figured it out, he "did not sleep for three days" while he worked out how to best arrange the numbers to create 18 unique Sudoku puzzles within the cube. Horowitz then
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Mechanically identical to the standard 3×3×3 cube. However, the numbers on the centre pieces force the solver to become aware that each one can be in one of four orientations, thus hugely increasing the total number of combinations. The number of combinations of centre face orientations is 4.
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Mechanically, no different from the puzzle above. However, the picture on the pieces gives it something of the nature of a jigsaw puzzle, in addition to being a combination puzzle. Note that the picture consists of a multitude of polyhedra which have been made into Rubik puzzles.
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Also known as Rubik's Sphere. Mechanically identical to the 3×3×3 cube in operation and solution. The only practical difference is that it is rather hard to grip. This accounts for the poor condition of this specimen, as the coloured stickers tend to get forced off in use.
763:. That is, all its edges form right angles. Or in other words (in the majority of cases), a box shape. A regular cuboid, in the context of this article, is a cuboid puzzle where all the pieces are the same size in edge length. Pieces are often referred to as "cubies".
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Mechanically identical to the standard 3×3×3 cube but not a real puzzle since all the faces are the same colour. There are also cubes which have only three colours, either one colour per pair of opposite faces or one colour per layer. Also known as the Dodo cube.
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A holey burr puzzle is characterised by internal holes, which usually allow for sliding movements of individual pieces or groups of pieces. The level of a holey burr puzzle specifies how many sliding movements are necessary to assemble or disassemble the puzzle.
2267:. It consists of a bonded transparent plastic box containing seven small cubes. There is an empty space the size of one small cube inside the box and the small cubes are moveable inside the box by tilting the box causing a cube to fall into the space.
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Similar to the original Rubik's Cube, the Skewb differs in that its four axes of rotation pass through the corners of the cube rather than the centres of the faces. As a result, it is a deep-cut puzzle in which each twist scrambles all six faces.
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Mechanically identical to the standard 3×3×3 cube. However the pieces are in some way tactile to allow operation by blind persons, or to solve blindfolded. The cube pictured is unicolor and has
Braille characters embossed on the pieces, while
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of it, this makes the solution easier, however odd combinations of corner columns cannot be achieved by legal moves. The solver may unwittingly attempt an odd combination solution, but will not be aware of this until the last few pieces.
2396:. There have been many different designs, the example shown here uses graphic symbols instead of numbers. The solution requires that there are no repeated symbols in any row, column or diagonal. The picture shows the puzzle unsolved.
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Megaminx variants with multiple layers per face. The
Gigaminx has 2 layers per face, for a total of 5 layers per edge; the Teraminx has 3 layers per face, 7 layers per edge; and the Petaminx has 4 layers per face, 9 layers per edge.
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to an existing puzzle. They therefore do not add to the complexity of the puzzle configuration, they just make it look more complex. Solution strategies remain the same, though a scrambled puzzle can have a strange appearance.
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patented the numerical design that he created. Mass production was completed in China by
American Classic Toy Inc, a company belonging to Horowitz. The product was sold in the United States in retailers such as
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This was mass-produced by a
Chinese company in 2015 using a Shapeways 3D print, without the permission of van Deventer. An agreement was later made with another company to acknowledge his contribution.
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puzzle, Horowitz wanted to introduce the puzzle to the games business, and had the idea of combining it with the Rubik's cube. Horowitz already had access to molds for the Rubik's Cube, as he owned the
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The cubelets are connected by an elastic band running through them. They can rotate freely. The aim of the puzzle is to arrange the chain in such a way that they will form 3 x 3 x 3 or 4 x 4 x 4 cube.
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Some would not count this as a combinational puzzle though it bears the Rubik name. Also known as Rubik's Twist. There is no one solution to this puzzle but multiple different shapes can be made.
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corners of the Skewb
Ultimate, an additional constraint on the orientation of these pieces appears. Any Skewb Diamond solution thus requires a few additions in order to solve the Skewb Ultimate.
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Although a mechanical realization of the puzzle is usual, it is not actually necessary. It is only necessary that the rules for the operations are defined. The puzzle can be realized entirely in
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Solutions to this cube is similar to a regular 3x3x3 except that odd-parity combinations are possible with this puzzle. This cube uses a special mechanism due to absence of a central core.
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A dodecahedron cut into 20 corner pieces and 30 edge pieces. It is similar to the
Megaminx, but is deeper cut, giving edges that behave differently from the Megaminx's edges when twisted.
697:. Often, the solution is required to be some recognisable pattern such as "all like colours together" or "all numbers in order". The most famous of these puzzles is the original
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cuboid puzzles ranging from the trivial 3×3 to the 5-dimensional 7×7×7×7×7 which has only been solved twice so far. However, the 6×6×6×6×6 has only been solved once, since its
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Invented by Oskar van
Deventer, it looks like a disproportional Rubik's Cube, but it allows the middle layer to turn 45 degrees and swap center pieces with edge pieces.
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Most of the puzzles in this class of puzzle are generally custom made in small numbers. Most of them start with the internal mechanism of a standard puzzle. Additional
2604:. Edge pieces are gears that turn when faces turn and force opposite faces to turn together. Despite its appearance it is considered easier than the Rubik's Cube.
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space or as a set of mathematical statements. In fact, there are some puzzles that can only be realized in virtual space. An example is the 4-dimensional 3×3×3×3
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However, odd combinations (overall odd number of rotations) of the centre faces cannot be achieved with legal operations. The increase is therefore x2 over the
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Panagiotis Verdes holds a patent to a method which is said to be able to make cubes up to 11×11×11. He has fully working products for 2×2×2 - 9×9×9 cubes.
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Similar to the Gear Cube but on one axis there are no gears allowing for 3x3x3 turns on the top and bottom layer. Significantly harder than a Gear cube.
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First rotational puzzle created that has just one colour, requiring the solver to restore the puzzle to its original cube form without colour aids.
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Mechanically identical to the 3×3×3 cube although the example pictured is easier to solve due to the restricted colour scheme. This puzzle is a
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made by
Politechnika is coloured the same as the standard cube, but there is an embossed symbol on each square which corresponds to a colour.
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making the total approximately 10 combinations. This adds to the difficulty of the puzzle but not astronomically; only one or two additional
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form an irregular hexagon or a square. Square One is an example of another very large class of puzzle — cuboid puzzles which have
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An octahedral variation on the Skewb, it is a deep-cut puzzle very similar to the Skewb and is a dual-polyhedron transformation.
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A traditional sliding piece puzzle. There are now endless variations of this original puzzle implemented as computer games.
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Revenge). Solve the 2x2x2 first, then solve the 4x4x4 by making exchanges only. Solving the type II is much more difficult.
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3082:, Horowitz, Jay, "Three dimensional sudoku cube puzzle and method", published 2007-05-08, issued 2007-11-22
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Very possibly the simplest regular cuboid puzzle to solve. Completely trivial solution as the puzzle consists of only two
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These ubiquitous puzzles come in many sizes and designs. The traditional design is with numbers and the solution forms a
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pieces are oblong rather than square. There is in existence a similar puzzle actually called Rhombicuboctahedron which
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The BrainTwist is a unique tetrahedral puzzle with an ability to "flip", showing only half of the puzzle at a time.
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there is also a "2 3x3x3 fused 2x2x2" version called the fused cube. The first Siamese cube was made by
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A combination puzzle is solved by achieving a particular combination starting from a random (scrambled)
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Mechanically identical to the Pocket Cube. However, much easier to solve as it only uses two colours.
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There have been many different shapes of Rubik type puzzles constructed. As well as cubes, all of the
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1038:). It does not change form, and the top and bottom colours do not mix with the colours on the sides.
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and sold for $ 9.87 each. The price was chosen specifically because each number only appears once.
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The Dogic is an icosahedron cut into 60 triangular pieces around its 12 tips and 20 face centers.
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in 1981. This has been credited as the first example of a "handmade modified rotational puzzle".
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Tetrahedral-shaped puzzle with axes on the corners and trivial tips. It was invented in 1970 by
705:. They are often face-turning, but commonly exist in corner-turning and edge-turning varieties.
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pattern in some way affects the difficulty of the solution or is notable in some other way.
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This is a simple example of one a large number of bandaged cube types that have been made.
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for the corner pieces are required. It is nevertheless surprisingly non-trivial to solve.
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puzzles on the sides or rows. The toy was originally created in 2006 by Jay Horowitz in
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Piece configuration: 5 intersecting circular rotational groups of oddly shaped pieces
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are required to affect a solution. Note that the puzzle can be treated as a number
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Solution is much the same as 3×3×3 cube except additional (and relatively simple)
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Solution is much the same as 3×3×3 cube except additional (and relatively simple)
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2998:"US toy maker combines Sudoku and Rubik's Cube amid popularity of brain teasers"
2956:"US toy maker combines Sudoku and Rubik's Cube amid popularity of brain teasers"
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12-sided polyhedron puzzle similar to Rubik's Cube in operation and solution.
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Another virtual puzzle in the Rubik series, but this time a very simple one.
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Piece configuration: gigaminx is 5x5x5, teraminx is 7x7x7, petaminx is 9x9x9
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1443:. It was subsequently produced in China, marketed and sold internationally.
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company Gentosha Education; it is the third "Okamoto Cube" (invented by
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A bandaged cube is a cube where some of the pieces are stuck together.
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Edge turning tetrahedron shaped puzzle with a 2×2×2 cube mechanism.
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of pieces which can be manipulated into different combinations by a
207:. Statements consisting only of original research should be removed.
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Horowitz promoted his new product in at toy fairs such as the 2007
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does not remain constant (due to not having proper center pieces)
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The Cube. The Ultimate Guide to the World’s Best Selling Puzzles
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Virtual 4-dimensional puzzle, the 4-D analogue of the Megaminx.
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Experimental cube made by 3-D printing of plastic invented by
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911:(s) are required to unscramble the centre pieces and edges.
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Not entirely 2D. Involves flipping parts back onto itself.
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N-dimensional sequential move puzzles § Magic 120-cell
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3131:"How a Shapeways 3D-print puzzle got knocked off in China"
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ones. This puzzle's current production status is unknown.
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N-dimensional sequential move puzzles § 3x3 2D square
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puzzle similar to Rubik's Cube in operation and solution.
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Published by Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers, Inc (
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puzzle similar to Pocket Cube in operation and solution.
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Simpler to solve than the standard cube in that only the
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Combines the concepts of the gear cube and mixup cube.
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101:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
2767:(in Japanese). Gentosha Education. Archived from
2534:Piece configuration: 4×5-2 with some fused pieces
2263:The Minus Cube is a 3D mechanical variant of the
3904:
1650:Commercial name: Lan Lan Rex Cube (Flower Box)
681:, the archetype of this kind of puzzle is the
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2488:The five ringed version of the Rubik's Magic
1812:Commercial Name: Gigaminx, Teraminx, Petaminx
1082:These puzzles are made by bonding additional
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2282:Piece configuration: 3×3×2 12-position dials
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1489:. Adrienne Citrin, the spokeswoman for the
1055:Piece configuration: two 3×3×3 fused 1×1×3
64:Learn how and when to remove these messages
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2252:Piece configuration: 2×2×2-1 sliding cubes
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2225:Piece configuration: 6 interlocking sticks
2223:Name: holey burr puzzles with level > 1
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2613:Gear Cube Extreme and Gear Cube Ultimate
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1431:in which the aim is to solve one or more
1381:puzzle on each of the six faces with the
241:Learn how and when to remove this message
223:Learn how and when to remove this message
161:Learn how and when to remove this message
27:Puzzles solved by mechanical manipulation
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3129:van Deventer, Oskar (24 October 2015).
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931:Piece configuration: 2×2×2 to 11×11×11
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2681:N-dimensional sequential move puzzles
2335:Piece configuration: 1x1x27 or 1x1x64
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976:N-dimensional sequential move puzzles
3892:1982 World Rubik's Cube Championship
3112:"top 5 hardest massproduced puzzles"
1612:that are not themselves all cuboid.
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99:adding citations to reliable sources
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29:
3886:The Simple Solution to Rubik's Cube
2600:This twisty puzzle was invented by
2444:The original sliding piece puzzle.
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3151:A large database of twisty puzzles
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2904:. The Puzzle Museum. January 2003.
2691:List of Rubik's Cube manufacturers
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25:
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3257:Rubik's family cubes of all sizes
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2404:Sliding piece puzzle with picture
2197:Non-Rubik style three-dimensional
2100:Commercial Name: Pyraminx Crystal
1872:Commercial Name: Alexander's Star
1450:A scrambled colorless Sudoku Cube
1021:Piece configuration (4th): 2×2×6
889:Commercial name: Professor's Cube
641:A disassembled modern Rubik's 3x3
45:This article has multiple issues.
2092:
1804:
1019:Piece configuration (3rd): 3×4×4
1017:Piece configuration (2nd): 2×3×3
1015:Piece configuration (1st): 2×2×3
854:Commercial name: Rubik's Revenge
268:
177:
75:
34:
3871:Rubik's Cube in popular culture
3161:The Magic Polyhedra Patent Page
3122:
3104:
3091:
3072:
2934:
2126:Commercial Name: Magic 120-cell
2000:Commercial Name: Skewb Ultimate
1483:American International Toy Fair
1341:the original "Blind Man's Cube"
633:A combination puzzle collection
86:needs additional citations for
53:or discuss these issues on the
2894:
2865:
2836:
2811:
2782:
2757:
2728:
2711:"MagicCube5D Hall of Insanity"
2703:
2307:Commercial Name: Rubik's Snake
2280:Commercial Name: Rubik's Clock
1969:Commercial Name: Skewb Diamond
1414:
1300:Commercial name: Calendar Cube
1199:Piece configuration: 17x17x17
688:
13:
1:
3057:. Vol. 4. Archived from
2696:
2501:Commercial name:2D Magic Cube
2483:Rubik's Magic: Master Edition
2231:Burr puzzle § Holey burr
2059:Commercial Name: Diamond Cube
1487:Hong Kong Toys and Games Fair
1454:
1191:Commercial name: Over The Top
1134:Piece configuration: 3x3x3-7.
823:Commercial name: Rubik's Cube
3101:, page 209, 9 September 1982
3080:US patent US2007267813A1
3006:. 2007-02-17. Archived from
3003:International Herald Tribune
2964:. 2007-02-17. Archived from
2961:International Herald Tribune
2902:"Collection of cube puzzles"
2133:Piece configuration: 3×3×3×3
2032:Commercial Name: Barrel Cube
1892:Nonconvex uniform polyhedron
1837:Commercial Name: Impossiball
1750:Commercial Name: Pyramorphix
1570:Piece configuration: various
1476:
1274:Commercial name: Fooler Cube
1246:Commercial name: Junior Cube
1174:Piece configuration: 4x4x4.
1053:Geometric shape: Fused cubes
970:Piece configuration: 3×3×3×3
788:Commercial name: Pocket Cube
7:
2674:
2333:Commercial Name: Snake Cube
2309:Piece configuration: 1x1x24
2250:Commercial Name: Minus Cube
2177:Commercial Name: Magic Ball
1907:Commercial Name: BrainTwist
1672:Commercial name: Mixup Cube
1591:Commercial name: Square One
1497:under the name "Sudokube".
1356:Commercial Name: Magic Cube
1259:Pocket Cube § Variants
1078:Piece configuration: 3×3×5
1030:Chronos and distributed by
203:the claims made and adding
10:
3939:
3834:Thistlethwaite's algorithm
2537:
2511:
2480:
2458:
2436:
2433:Piece configuration: 4×4-1
2409:
2384:
2338:
2312:
2285:
2255:
2228:
2184:Piece configuration: 3×3×3
2136:
2110:
2107:Piece configuration: 3x3x3
2066:Piece configuration: 3×3×3
2040:Piece configuration: 3×3×3
2010:
2007:Piece configuration: 3x3x3
1979:
1976:Piece configuration: 3x3x3
1948:
1945:Piece configuration: 4x4x4
1917:
1914:Piece configuration: 2x2x2
1882:
1879:Piece configuration: 3x3x3
1847:
1844:Piece configuration: 2x2x2
1791:
1788:Piece configuration: 3×3×3
1760:
1757:Piece configuration: 2×2×2
1725:
1722:Piece configuration: 3×3×3
1599:
1541:
1538:Piece configuration: 3x3x3
1402:Piece configuration: 3×3×3
1363:Piece configuration: 3×3×3
1333:Piece configuration: 3×3×3
1326:Rubik's Cube for the blind
1307:Piece configuration: 3×3×3
1281:Piece configuration: 3×3×3
1256:
1253:Piece configuration: 2×2×2
1137:
1126:Commercial name: Void cube
1104:Piece configuration: 1×1×2
1100:Commercial name: Boob cube
973:
934:
899:
896:Piece configuration: 5×5×5
864:
861:Piece configuration: 4×4×4
841:The original Rubik's Cube
833:
830:Piece configuration: 3×3×3
798:
795:Piece configuration: 2×2×2
744:polyhedra have been made.
3863:
3847:
3816:
3786:
3770:
3763:
3627:
3574:
3541:
3518:
3500:
3482:
3459:
3431:
3413:
3380:
3371:
3333:
3300:
3244:
3203:
2736:"2×2×3 (aka: Slim Tower)"
2577:
2362:
2206:
2160:
1839:Geometric shape: Rounded
1781:Commercial Name: Megaminx
1715:Commercial Name: Pyraminx
1698:
1514:
1227:
771:
720:puzzle, simulated by the
3277:5×5×5 (Professor's Cube)
3049:Pawlyna, Andrea (2007).
2508:Piece configuration: 3×3
2406:Piece configuration: 7×7
2381:Piece configuration: 7×7
1491:Toy Industry Association
993:Slim Tower or Tower Cube
727:
669:. Many such puzzles are
3877:Rubik, the Amazing Cube
3272:4×4×4 (Rubik's Revenge)
3116:TwistyPuzzles.com Forum
2942:"YuXin HuangLong 17x17"
1385:being 15 in this case.
924:Commercial name: V-CUBE
3855:World Cube Association
3730:Anthony Michael Brooks
3690:Krishnam Raju Gadiraju
2919:Slocum, Jerry (2009),
2294:adjacent clock faces.
2151:Other geometric shapes
1938:Commercial Name: Dogic
1531:Commercial name: Skewb
1451:
651:sequential move puzzle
642:
634:
3848:Official organization
3502:Truncated icosahedron
2819:"Rubik's Tower 2×2×4"
1449:
640:
632:
3267:3×3×3 (Rubik's Cube)
2478:Rubik's Master Magic
2379:Sliding piece puzzle
1427:is a variation on a
1102:Geometric shape: Box
1076:Geometric shape: Box
963:4-Dimensional puzzle
657:which consists of a
110:"Combination puzzle"
95:improve this article
3913:Combination puzzles
3542:Virtual combination
3374:combination puzzles
3336:combination puzzles
3262:2×2×2 (Pocket Cube)
2073:rhombicuboctahedron
2063:Rhombicuboctahedron
1602:Square One (puzzle)
1008:Non-uniform cuboids
579:Nikoli puzzle types
256:Part of a series on
18:Combination puzzles
3923:Mechanical puzzles
3839:Rubik's Cube group
3685:Prithveesh K. Bhat
3609:Rubik's Revolution
3484:Great dodecahedron
3236:Oskar van Deventer
3051:"World Enterprise"
2653:David's Gear Cube
2602:Oskar van Deventer
1876:Great dodecahedron
1467:Barnes & Noble
1452:
1214:Pattern variations
1205:Oskar van Deventer
1167:Crazy cube type II
671:mechanical puzzles
649:, also known as a
647:combination puzzle
643:
635:
584:Puzzle video games
569:Impossible puzzles
460:Puzzle video games
188:possibly contains
3900:
3899:
3812:
3811:
3537:
3536:
3301:Variations of the
3231:Panagiotis Verdes
3156:The Puzzle Museum
2929:978-1-57912-805-0
2877:TwistyPuzzles.com
2848:TwistyPuzzles.com
2794:TwistyPuzzles.com
2740:TwistyPuzzles.com
2672:
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2179:Geometric shape:
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2061:Geometric shape:
2034:Geometric shape:
2002:Geometric shape:
1971:Geometric shape:
1940:Geometric shape:
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1874:Geometric shape:
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1783:Geometric shape:
1752:Geometric shape:
1717:Geometric shape:
1686:
1685:
1674:Geometric shape:
1652:Geometric shape:
1629:Geometric shape:
1623:Commercial name:
1593:Geometric shape:
1565:Geometric shape:
1533:Geometric shape:
1501:Irregular cuboids
1462:Ideal Toy Company
1412:
1411:
1397:Geometric shape:
1358:Geometric shape:
1328:Geometric shape:
1313:into a calendar.
1302:Geometric shape:
1276:Geometric shape:
1248:Geometric shape:
1211:
1210:
1194:Geometric shape:
1169:Geometric shape:
1165:Crazy cube type I
1128:Geometric shape:
1036:Katsuhiko Okamoto
1010:Geometric shape:
965:Geometric shape:
926:Geometric shape:
891:Geometric shape:
856:Geometric shape:
825:Geometric shape:
790:Geometric shape:
734:regular polyhedra
627:
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251:
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190:original research
171:
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145:
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16:(Redirected from
3930:
3864:Related articles
3768:
3767:
3715:David Singmaster
3675:Shotaro Makisumi
3650:Jessica Fridrich
3628:Renowned solvers
3544:puzzles (>3D)
3492:Alexander's Star
3446:Pyraminx Crystal
3378:
3377:
3320:Nine-Colour Cube
3292:8×8×8 (V-Cube 8)
3287:7×7×7 (V-Cube 7)
3282:6×6×6 (V-Cube 6)
3204:Puzzle inventors
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3055:World Enterprise
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2850:. Archived from
2840:
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2821:. Archived from
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2796:. Archived from
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2751:
2742:. Archived from
2732:
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2722:
2713:. Archived from
2707:
2642:Gear Cube 5x5x5
2639:
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2528:
2503:Geometric shape:
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1163:Commercial name:
1159:
1154:
1132:with 1 iteration
1122:
1096:
1047:
959:
920:
902:Professor's Cube
885:
850:
819:
784:
766:
765:
736:and many of the
675:polyhedral shape
619:
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574:Maze video games
563:
523:Packing problems
518:Optical illusion
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3824:God's algorithm
3808:
3782:
3759:
3720:Ron van Bruchem
3645:Bob Burton, Jr.
3640:Édouard Chambon
3623:
3619:Rubik's Triamid
3570:
3543:
3533:
3514:
3496:
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3343:Helicopter Cube
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2036:Octagonal Prism
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867:Rubik's Revenge
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748:Regular cuboids
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533:Problem solving
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364:Disentanglement
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3794:Layer by Layer
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3740:Feliks Zemdegs
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3655:Chris Hardwick
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3602:Master Edition
3594:
3589:
3584:
3578:
3576:
3572:
3571:
3569:
3568:
3566:Magic 120-cell
3563:
3558:
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3528:Rubik's Domino
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3454:
3453:
3451:Skewb Ultimate
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3145:External links
3143:
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3121:
3103:
3090:
3071:
3020:
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2947:
2933:
2907:
2893:
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2844:"Specter Cube"
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2568:Geared puzzles
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2538:Main article:
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2481:Main article:
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2439:Fifteen puzzle
2437:Main article:
2431:Fifteen puzzle
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2412:Sliding puzzle
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2013:Skewb Ultimate
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3725:Eric Limeback
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3615:
3614:Rubik's Snake
3612:
3610:
3607:
3603:
3600:
3599:
3598:
3597:Rubik's Magic
3595:
3593:
3592:Rubik's Clock
3590:
3588:
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3423:Skewb Diamond
3421:
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3245:Rubik's Cubes
3243:
3237:
3234:
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3229:
3227:
3224:
3222:
3219:
3217:
3216:Larry Nichols
3214:
3212:
3209:
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3125:
3117:
3113:
3107:
3100:
3099:New Scientist
3097:Tony Durham,
3094:
3081:
3075:
3061:on 2009-04-03
3060:
3056:
3052:
3045:
3043:
3041:
3039:
3037:
3035:
3033:
3031:
3029:
3027:
3025:
3010:on 2008-10-15
3009:
3005:
3004:
2999:
2993:
2991:
2989:
2987:
2985:
2983:
2968:on 2008-10-15
2967:
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2957:
2951:
2943:
2937:
2930:
2926:
2922:
2916:
2914:
2912:
2903:
2897:
2883:on 2016-03-04
2882:
2878:
2874:
2868:
2854:on 2016-03-03
2853:
2849:
2845:
2839:
2825:on 2016-02-03
2824:
2820:
2814:
2800:on 2016-03-03
2799:
2795:
2791:
2785:
2771:on 2016-03-04
2770:
2766:
2760:
2746:on 2016-03-03
2745:
2741:
2737:
2731:
2717:on 2016-03-03
2716:
2712:
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2461:Rubik's Magic
2456:Rubik's Magic
2455:
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2311:
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2027:
2023:
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2017:
2014:
2009:
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1982:Skewb Diamond
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1625:Tony Fisher's
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1234:
1230:
1224:
1223:
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1200:
1197:
1190:
1187:
1183:
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1177:
1175:
1172:
1161:
1158:
1153:
1149:
1148:
1144:
1141:
1136:
1131:
1130:Menger Sponge
1124:
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1117:
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1112:
1108:
1106:
1098:
1095:
1091:
1090:
1085:
1081:
1079:
1072:
1070:
1068:
1067:
1063:
1058:
1056:
1051:Siamese cubes
1049:
1046:
1042:
1041:
1037:
1033:
1028:
1024:
1022:
1013:
1006:
1001:
998:
996:Rubik's Tower
995:
992:
991:
990:
989:
985:
980:
977:
972:
968:
961:
958:
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953:
949:
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631:
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590:
589:Puzzle topics
587:
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186:This article
184:
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143:
140:
136:
133:
129:
126:
122:
119:
115:
112: –
111:
107:
106:Find sources:
100:
96:
90:
89:
84:This article
82:
78:
73:
72:
67:
65:
58:
57:
52:
51:
46:
41:
32:
31:
19:
3884:
3875:
3771:Speedsolving
3745:Collin Burns
3700:Frank Morris
3665:Rowe Hessler
3582:Missing Link
3433:Dodecahedron
3395:Pyraminx Duo
3303:Rubik's Cube
3251:
3197:Rubik's Cube
3124:
3115:
3106:
3098:
3093:
3074:
3063:. Retrieved
3059:the original
3054:
3012:. Retrieved
3008:the original
3001:
2970:. Retrieved
2966:the original
2959:
2950:
2936:
2920:
2896:
2885:. Retrieved
2881:the original
2876:
2867:
2856:. Retrieved
2852:the original
2847:
2838:
2827:. Retrieved
2823:the original
2813:
2802:. Retrieved
2798:the original
2793:
2784:
2773:. Retrieved
2769:the original
2765:"Tower Cube"
2759:
2748:. Retrieved
2744:the original
2739:
2730:
2719:. Retrieved
2715:the original
2705:
2552:
2531:
2500:
2430:
2403:
2394:magic square
2378:
2332:
2306:
2279:
2249:
2222:
2176:
2125:
2104:Dodecahedron
2099:
2084:
2058:
2031:
2004:Dodecahedron
1999:
1968:
1937:
1906:
1871:
1836:
1816:Dodecahedron
1811:
1785:Dodecahedron
1780:
1749:
1714:
1671:
1649:
1622:
1590:
1576:
1562:
1530:
1504:
1480:
1458:
1429:Rubik's Cube
1424:
1420:
1418:
1394:
1379:magic square
1355:
1325:
1299:
1273:
1245:
1236:
1217:
1193:
1162:
1125:
1099:
1073:
1050:
1007:
962:
923:
888:
853:
836:Rubik's Cube
822:
787:
751:
738:semi-regular
731:
711:
707:
702:
699:Rubik's Cube
692:
683:Rubik's Cube
678:
650:
646:
644:
503:Brain teaser
374:
359:Construction
353:
237:
219:
210:
187:
157:
148:
138:
131:
124:
117:
105:
93:Please help
88:verification
85:
61:
54:
48:
47:Please help
44:
3817:Mathematics
3799:CFOP method
3778:Speedcubing
3755:Mátyás Kuti
3710:Gilles Roux
3705:Lars Petrus
3635:Yu Nakajima
3587:Rubik's 360
3575:Derivatives
3561:MagicCube7D
3556:MagicCube5D
3551:MagicCube4D
3469:Impossiball
3461:Icosahedron
3400:Pyramorphix
3382:Tetrahedron
3334:Other cubic
3325:Sudoku Cube
3226:Tony Fisher
3221:Uwe Mèffert
2686:Puck puzzle
2664:Gear Shift
2625:Gear Mixup
2079:one as the
2038:or Cylinder
1942:Icosahedron
1911:Tetrahedron
1857:icosahedron
1850:Impossiball
1841:icosahedron
1763:Pyramorphix
1754:Tetrahedron
1735:Uwe Mèffert
1719:Tetrahedron
1627:Golden Cube
1618:Golden Cube
1471:FAO Schwarz
1421:Sudoku Cube
1415:Sudoku Cube
1062:Tony Fisher
801:Pocket Cube
758:rectilinear
722:MagicCube4D
695:combination
689:Description
478:Metapuzzles
354:Combination
213:August 2019
3907:Categories
3660:Kevin Hays
3415:Octahedron
3405:BrainTwist
3211:Ernő Rubik
3065:2024-06-05
3014:2008-09-30
2972:2008-09-30
2887:2009-06-12
2858:2009-06-12
2829:2012-05-24
2804:2009-06-12
2775:2012-05-24
2750:2009-06-12
2721:2012-02-16
2697:References
2341:Snake cube
2258:Minus Cube
2075:but not a
1973:Octahedron
1920:BrainTwist
1455:Production
1375:algorithms
808:algorithms
761:polyhedron
724:software.
667:operations
538:Puzzlehunt
423:Logic maze
345:Mechanical
331:Logic grid
321:Dissection
197:improve it
121:newspapers
50:improve it
3829:Superflip
3764:Solutions
3735:Mats Valk
3695:Tyson Mao
3372:Non-cubic
3363:Gear Cube
3353:Dino Cube
3315:Bump Cube
3310:Void Cube
2596:Gear Cube
2581:Comments
2366:Comments
2210:Comments
2164:Comments
2087:uniform.
1890:12-sided
1702:Comments
1518:Comments
1477:Marketing
1231:Comments
1140:Void Cube
967:Tesseract
909:algorithm
874:algorithm
775:Comments
742:stellated
718:tesseract
543:Syllogism
446:Crossword
326:Induction
303:Situation
201:verifying
56:talk page
3750:Max Park
3680:Toby Mao
3670:Leyan Lo
3510:Tuttminx
3441:Megaminx
3390:Pyraminx
3358:Square 1
3252:Overview
2675:See also
2575:Picture
2553:Geranium
2360:Picture
2265:n-puzzle
2204:Picture
2158:Picture
2130:120-cell
1855:Rounded
1794:Megaminx
1728:Pyraminx
1696:Picture
1512:Picture
1425:Sudokube
1371:original
1225:Picture
1032:Japanese
945:V-Cube 8
941:V-Cube 7
937:V-Cube 6
769:Picture
377:problems
289:Guessing
151:May 2019
3918:Puzzles
3804:Optimal
3787:Methods
3530:(2x3x3)
2873:"2×2×6"
2790:"2×3×3"
2540:Klotski
2532:Klotski
2077:uniform
1437:Sebring
714:virtual
653:, is a
528:Paradox
508:Dilemma
421: (
408:Sliding
382:Folding
262:Puzzles
195:Please
135:scholar
3520:Cuboid
3086:
2927:
2505:Square
2181:Sphere
1610:cubies
1495:Amazon
1433:Sudoku
1111:cubies
1084:cubies
1012:Cuboid
984:parity
943:, and
754:cuboid
655:puzzle
494:Topics
451:Sudoku
437:Number
392:Tiling
298:Riddle
137:
130:
123:
116:
108:
3474:Dogic
3348:Skewb
3134:(PDF)
2578:Data
2363:Data
2207:Data
2161:Data
1951:Dogic
1699:Data
1544:Skewb
1515:Data
1228:Data
1027:cubie
1002:2×2×6
999:3×4×4
772:Data
756:is a
728:Types
663:group
562:Lists
469:Mazes
413:Chess
387:Stick
312:Logic
280:Types
142:JSTOR
128:books
2925:ISBN
2081:edge
1676:Cube
1654:Cube
1631:Cube
1595:Cube
1567:Cube
1535:Cube
1485:and
1469:and
1441:Ohio
1419:The
1399:Cube
1360:Cube
1330:Cube
1304:Cube
1278:Cube
1250:Cube
1196:Cube
1171:Cube
928:Cube
893:Cube
858:Cube
827:Cube
792:Cube
740:and
548:Tale
513:Joke
435:and
433:Word
419:Maze
403:Tour
369:Lock
114:news
1423:or
673:of
665:of
659:set
199:by
97:by
3909::
3114:.
3053:.
3023:^
3000:.
2981:^
2958:.
2910:^
2875:.
2846:.
2792:.
2738:.
2085:is
1737:.
1439:,
1113:.
939:,
752:A
645:A
375:Go
59:.
3189:e
3182:t
3175:v
3136:.
3118:.
3068:.
3017:.
2975:.
2944:.
2931:)
2890:.
2861:.
2832:.
2807:.
2778:.
2753:.
2724:.
618:e
611:t
604:v
425:)
244:)
238:(
226:)
220:(
215:)
211:(
193:.
164:)
158:(
153:)
149:(
139:·
132:·
125:·
118:·
91:.
66:)
62:(
20:)
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