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It’s Follow-Up Friday: For the Wynne edition!
Welcome to Follow-Up Friday!
By this time, you know the drill. Follow-Up Friday is a chance for us to revisit the subjects of previous posts and bring the PuzzleNation audience up to speed on all things puzzly.
And today, I’d like to return to the subject of Arthur Wynne.

[Image courtesy of express.co.uk.]
In 1913, Arthur Wynne created the first modern crossword puzzle — which he called a Word-Cross puzzle — and over a hundred years later, we are still enjoying the ever-increasing variety of puzzles and clues spawned by that “fun”-filled grid. (Click here for more details on that groundbreaking puzzle.)
Wynne was born on June 22, 1871 in Liverpool, England, but moved to the states in the early 1890s, spending time in Pittsburgh and New York City before creating his Word-Cross puzzle for the New York World. (We can also credit Wynne with the use of symmetrical black squares in crossword grids.)

So, in honor of Mr. Wynne’s 144th birthday, I’ve got a little word creation puzzle for you! How many words of four or more letters can you make from the letters in ARTHUR WYNNE’s name?
I came up with 110! Can you match or top my wordcount? Let me know!
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The Perils of Puzzling: Alternate solutions!

[Thinking hard. Image courtesy of popsci.com]
The science, fantasy, and science fiction website io9 has a marvelous weekly feature run by Robbie Gonzalez, wherein they tackle brain teasers and riddles both new and old. I’ve explored several of them here on PuzzleNation Blog, most notably the 100 Men in Hats puzzle, which expanded on the Men in Hats puzzle concept from one of our earliest posts.
But one of their latest riddles provided a valuable example of how crucial test-solving and crowd-sourcing can be to a puzzle’s success.
The idea was simple enough: look at the numbers below, and determine what number should take the place of the question mark. The only guideline? The answer was NOT six.

I posted this riddle on our Facebook page on Monday and shared it with fellow editors at the PuzzleNation office, and got all sorts of answers in return.
One solver came up with 5 as the answer, positing that the vertical numbers formed fractions. So, with 1/2 and then 3/4 as the next number, the pattern would be adding 1/4. Adding 1/4 to 3/4 equals 1, and 5/5 equals 1.
There were other solutions that also yielded 5 as an answer, like doing what my friend called a zigzag equation, adding 1 from the top to 4 from the bottom to get 5 on the top as the answer, and then reversing it by adding 2 from the bottom to 3 from the top, getting 5 on the bottom as the missing answer.
A second solver came up with 3 as the answer, adding the top row to equal 9, and then trying to do the same with the bottom row.
Another solver saw them as two separate patterns, where going from 1 to 3 involved adding 2 and going from 2 to 4 involved multiplying by two. Therefore, by this method, the answer is 8. (Yet another solver did the same, except they squared the numbers along the bottom row, leading to 16 as the answer.)
As you can see, there were all sorts of mathematical solutions. When you’re told to ignore the most obvious solution, your mind can create some truly innovative ways of reimagining the information available.

[A head full of numbers. Image courtesy of equip.org]
Several solvers thought outside the box and came up with R, relating the numbers by their positions on a gearshift knob instead of mathematically.
As it turns out, this was the solution the puzzle’s creator initially intended, only realizing later that the puzzle had many possible solutions.
In his own words: The riddle was too open-ended. Whether you interpreted it as a mathematical puzzle, or an automotive design puzzle, it was poorly posed, and that’s on me. Puzzle-posing is an art in and of itself, and it’s easy to mess up. For a solution to be satisfying, the person posing the puzzle needs to provide enough information that the puzzle is unambiguously solvable, but not so much that it gives too much away.

[A proposed layout that points more directly toward the creator’s intended solution.]
Now, as a puzzler myself, I can absolutely empathize with Mr. Gonzalez here. There are plenty of times I’ve created a puzzle or a brain teaser and assumed that everyone would follow the same path I envisioned, considering the solution if not obvious, then at least reproduceable.
But solvers can always surprise you by finding alternate routes to the answer or utilizing a different way of thinking that ends with a second, but still valid solution.
So after a few stumbles and missteps of my own in the past that were similar to the one in today’s puzzle, I now make sure to have another set of eyes on my brain teasers, either during the creation process or as a test-solver afterward.
A second set of eyes can be absolutely invaluable in helping you spot possible alternate solutions.
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The toughest puzzles the UK has to offer!

[A sample of the puzzle types awaiting you in the UK Puzzle Championship packet.]
I talk about crossword tournaments a lot in this blog, because crosswords are such a predominant part of the puzzle world. ACPT is a huge deal every year, the Indie 500 had its first (hopefully annual!) event last month, the Minnesota Crossword Tournament was last weekend, and Lollapuzzoola is gearing up for its 8th year of puzzle goodness this August!
But hey, maybe you’re not a crossword fan. (Though, with killer crossword apps like this one, why WOULDN’T you be?)
Don’t worry, there are still plenty of events that will allow you to indulge your puzzle fix without testing your crossword-solving mettle.
For instance, this Friday, the UK Puzzle Championship 2015 kicks off!

The championship consists of 28 puzzles, each with differing point values, potentially adding up to a maximum score of 650 points. Although the championship runs from Friday through Monday, those are only the hours available for competitors to download their puzzle packets. (You can download the instruction booklet, complete with example puzzles, here.)
As soon as you receive your password and download the packet, you’ll have only two and a half hours to solve all of the puzzles and input your answers onto the Answer Submission Page.

Now, unless you are a resident of the UK, you will only be able to participate in the contest as a guest. (The top UK participant will be the 2015 UK Puzzle Champion, and the top two UK participants become eligible to join the UK Team for the World Puzzle Championship in October.) But even if only UK residents can win, just attempting the packet is a puzzly challenge worthy of any ambitious solver!
So, fellow puzzlers and PuzzleNationers, will you be throwing your puzzle-solving hat in the ring and joining me in this UK puzzly Thunderdome? Let me know! I’d love to see how you do!
Thanks for visiting PuzzleNation Blog today! You can share your pictures with us on Instagram, friend us on Facebook, check us out on Twitter, Pinterest, and Tumblr, and be sure to check out the growing library of PuzzleNation apps and games!
It’s Follow-Up Friday: Broadway Puzzles edition!
Welcome to Follow-Up Friday!
By this time, you know the drill. Follow-Up Friday is a chance for us to revisit the subjects of previous posts and bring the PuzzleNation audience up to speed on all things puzzly.
And today, I’m posting the results of our #PennyDellBroadwayPuzzles hashtag game!

[Sir Ian McKellen, exhausted from coming up with puns all night.]
You may be familiar with the board game Schmovie, hashtag games on Twitter, or @midnight’s Hashtag Wars segment on Comedy Central.
For the last few months, we’re been collaborating on puzzle-themed hashtag games with our pals at Penny/Dell Puzzles, and this month’s hook was Penny/Dell Broadway Puzzles!
Examples of shows might be “Oooooooooooooklahoma Runs!” and examples of songs might be “(I Am) Sixteen Going on Seven-Ups” or “Give and Take My Regards to Broadway.”
So, without further ado, check out what the puzzlers at PuzzleNation and Penny/Dell Puzzles came up with!
Shows!
Figgerits on the Roof / Fiddler’s Frame on the Roof (featuring the smash song Matchmaker)
Keep On Movin’ Out
Les MiséraBubbles
The Bookworms of Mormon / The Book of Bricks and Mortar
La Cage aux Fill-Ins
Lucky Starlight Express
Jesus Christ Superstarspell / Jesus Christ Superscore
The Mystery Word of Edwin Drood / The Mystery Person of Edwin Drood
A Chorus Line ‘em Up / Draw the Chorus Line / End of the Chorus Line / A Crostic Line
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Foursomes / Four(-um) Corners / Four Square
How to Succeed in Boxes Without Really Trying
A Little Puzzler Night Music
The Fan Words of the Opera / The Shadow of the Opera
Sunrays Boulevard
Oh! (Quote) Cal-cu(la)ta!
The Best Little Scoreboard in Texas / The Best Little “Score”house in T(ripl)ex-as
Annie-gram
Annie-gram Get Your Gun
Fill-Into the Woods / Drop-In to the Woods
Avenue (Q)uotagrams
Kiss Me, Kate-gories
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Timed Framework
Godspell(down) / Godspellbound / God Spell it out
Can-Can Cancellations
Les Miz(sing Vowels)
The WIZard Words
Wizard Words of Oz, featuring the song “Follow the Yellow Brick By Brick Road”
Bowl Mame
The Pajama Bowl Game
Cactus Flower Power
The 25th Annual Putnam County Starspelling Bee
Odds and Evens Couple by Neil Simon Says
The Merry Window Boxes
A Balancing Act of God
Kiss of the Spider’s Web
Drummerman of La Mancha
Songs!
“Ya Got Double Trouble” (The Music Man)
“Sit Down, You’re Rockin’ the Quick Quote” (Guys and Dolls)
“There’s a Places, Please for Us” (West Side Story)
“The Circle Sums of Life” (The Lion King)
“Dance: Ten, Looks: Three from Nine” / “Dance a Perfect Ten, Looks Three of a Kind” (A Chorus Line)
“I Don’t Need Anything But You Know the Odds” (Annie)
“Scoremaster of the House” (Les Miserables)
“Getting to Know You Know the Odds” (The King & I)
“Mamma Mia needs some Alphabet Soup!!” (Mamma Mia)
“Surrey with the Fringe On Top to Bottom” (Oklahoma!)
“Ease on Down the Crossroads” (The Wiz)
“Cell Blockbuilders Tango” (Chicago)
“I Don’t Know How To Solve This” (and I’ve solved so many puzzles before…) (Jesus Christ Superstar)
“No Places, Please Like London” (Sweeney Todd)
“No Good Deal” (Wicked)
“Grease Is the Codeword” (Grease)
“A Whole New Word Trails” (Aladdin)
“I’m Still Here & There” (Follies)
Some of our Twitter followers also got in on the fun, with @MicMcCracken tweeting “Les Misery Loves Company!”
And, naturally, it wouldn’t be a PuzzleNation game unless someone went above and beyond the call of duty. This time around, fellow PuzzleNationer Debra created a puzzly version of the opening stanza of “My Favorite Things”!
Crosswords and Word Seeks and Sudoku
Fill-Ins and Ken-Kens and Logic Problems too
Codewords and Crostics and Diamond Rings
These are a few of my favorite things!
All in all, the game was great fun!
Have you come up with any Penny/Dell Broadway Puzzles of your own? Let us know! We’d love to see them!
Thanks for visiting PuzzleNation Blog today! You can share your pictures with us on Instagram, friend us on Facebook, check us out on Twitter, Pinterest, and Tumblr, and be sure to check out the growing library of PuzzleNation apps and games!
