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Jeff’s Puzzle and Magic Reviews

DaVinci’s Secret: The Clue

DaVinci's Secret: The Clue

DaVinci's Secret: The Clue

This is the first in the “Sacred Myths and Legends” series of 7 puzzles by Family Games.  It is a large, nicely made puzzle, and has 2 parts.  First, you have to open it to get a scroll.  Next, you have to use the clues written on the scroll, along with other clues found in the puzzle, to solve the password.  There were additional clues inside the puzzle, so I assume they have something to do with the next puzzle in the series.

The puzzle was a lot larger than what I expected.  I don’t have it in front of me right now, but it’s around 8″ long or so.  It comes in a beautiful box that has a magnetic latch and serves as a beautiful display case.  Since it’s mass produced, it’s also pretty reasonable:  about $32 on Amazon.com.

As you can guess from the title, this puzzle seems to be inspired from Dan Brown’s “The DaVinci Code” book.  The puzzle functions as a cryptex, though it is necessarily less secure than normal in order to be openable.

The password was harder to get than actually opening the puzzle.  I had to break down and find it on the internet.

The low price, quality, size, and multiple aspects of this puzzle make it a real winner.  I can’t wait to get the rest of the series.

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A few take-apart puzzles

Puzzle boxes and locks are not the only secret-opening puzzles.  Here are a few more.

Lighthouse

This is the lighthouse puzzle from Bits and Pieces.  It’s small and brass, and I believe it’s based on a design described in “Puzzles Old and New” originally published in 1893 by Professor Hoffmann.  According to the online Puzzle Museum,

HOFFMANN’S original book was effectively a catalogue of most of the mechanical puzzles available in Victorian London in the 1890s together with their solutions, plus many excellent new and classical puzzle posers.”

Some of the mechanical puzzles described in the book are thus referred to as Hoffmann puzzles.

The point of the lighthouse puzzle is to remove the ring.  No external tools can be used, though it’s very tempting.  It’s not hard, but it is clever.

YOT

This is the YOT.  The object is to remove the silver dollar.  This was one of the first mechanical puzzles I got since I started collecting recently.  I probably got it soon after the Moroccan puzzle box.  My wife and I spent about a week trying to open this up.  I had to resort to looking at the solution.  It turns out I had thought of the correct solution early on, but not followed through appropriately, and instead I got sidetracked on all kinds of weird ideas.

All Hail the King

This is “All Hail the King”.  I got it from Mr. Puzzle in Australia when the American dollar was trading well against the Australian dollar.  It’s designed by Marcel Gillen.  It’s an aluminum chess king, though it’s much larger than the ordinary “regulation” size chess king.  I got lucky and was able to solve it when most of my coworkers were not (though Mike Butler, our “champion”, solved it quickly).

Strijbos bolt

This is a small puzzle bolt that I purchased from Will Strijbos.  The object is to remove the ring.  It’s not difficult.  I actually had just seen a version of this puzzle that belonged to Jon Thorn, one of my coworkers.  Jon made it himself out of a monster-sized bolt.  Jon’s version was hard to reassemble, since one of his relatives had used a large wrench on it in an attempt to open it.

All of these puzzles are metal.  I like that because it makes them unlikely to be accidentally damaged – unless you decide to use a tool like a big wrench to try and open it up.

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