We have a special alert today for anyone and everyone who uses our Daily POP Crosswords app and enjoys the marvelous free daily puzzle crafted by our dynamite team of constructors!
We have a brand-new puzzle set available to charm your puzzle-loving heart!
Consisting of ten puzzles, all with themes related to love and romance, this Love Letters featured puzzle set in Daily POP Crosswords offers the fresh, pop culture-savvy cluing you’ve come to expect from PuzzleNation, all in ten terrific puzzles collected for your convenience and enjoyment!
Available now for in-app purchase with Daily POP Crossword Coins, don’t miss out on this excellent new puzzle set!
Happy puzzling, everybody!
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You may be familiar with the board game Schmovie, hashtag games on Twitter, or @midnight’s Hashtag Wars segment on Comedy Central.
For years now, we’ve been collaborating on puzzle-themed hashtag games with our pals at Penny Dell Puzzles, and this month’s hook was #PennyDellSpacePuzzles, mashing up Penny Dell puzzles with planets, astronauts, constellations, celestial objects, and more!
Examples include: World Seeks, Buzz All-Four-One-drin, and Tossing & Saturning.
So, without further ado, check out what the puzzlers at PuzzleNation and Penny Dell Puzzles came up with!
Chess Solartaire
Triangle Suns
Diamond Rings of Saturn
Cosmic Sunrays
Space Battleships
Comet Combos
Bookwormholes / Blackout holes
All-Star Worm Seek Hole
Orbits and Pieces
Word Spiral-arm Galaxy
Nebulabyrinth
Nebula Square
Meteorite of Milky Way
Spaces, Please
Places, Pleides
Planets, Please
Polaris, Please
Point the Way Polaris
Point the Milky Way
Bits and Pisces
Hub-ble-caps
How Spaceman-y Triangles
Libra Tiles
Diagonal Orion’s
Penumbra Sleuth
Southern Cross Arithmetic
Scorpiusmaster
Quoteballs of Fire
Space Odysseys and Evens
End of the Karman Line
The Moon’s Shadow
Easy Plutoku
Exploraworld / Explorer 1 Words
A to Z Mars
Mars-bles
Marbles Rover
Four-fit the mission
Michio Kakuro / Michisu Doku
All Foursnax
Antilagrams
Countdown and Pair-blast-off / Pair LiftOff
The Disco-very mission
Headings for space
Alphabetics Centauri / Alpha Centauri Soup
Mission Dominoes / Missioning Dominoes
“Houston we have a Plug-Ins” / “Houston, we have a Deduction Problem!”
“Houston: the Crozzle has landed.”
Pulling-Strings theory
Board the space Shuffle
Lucky Rover
Lucky Shooting Star
Sputnik Satellites
Bull’s-Eye Spiral Galaxy
Scramble Across the Universe
Planet in the Round
Around the Sun
In and Around the World
World Ways
Mystery World
A Few Choice Worlds
Star Worlds
Battlestarships Galactica
“Not so expert and the Challenger crosswords”
“GROUND CONTROL TO MAJOR STEPHEN HAWKING’S BRAIN BOOSTER PACK”
Naturally, the intrepid puzzlers who submitted these marvelous puns couldn’t resist taking a crack at Neil Armstrong’s iconic words:
Two for One small step for man; one giant leap for mankind.
One small Step by Step for man; one giant leap for mankind.
One small Step by Step for man; one giant leap for Three of a Kind.
One small Step by Step for man; one Puzzler’s Giant leap for mankind.
And to close out today’s entry, a special shout-out to several sci-fi savvy puzzlers!
The first offered a delightful take on a famous TV monologue:
Space: the final Mind Tickler. This is the Grand Tour of the Lucky Star-ship Penny. Its Five-Alive mission: to Explora-strange-new-worlds, to Word Seek out new Face-to-Face Puzzlers and new Cryptobotanies, to Bowl Game where no solver has Word Gamed before.
The second, more movie-minded contributor said: All I could think about when I read the theme was space was the Spaceballs theme song…
If you’re livin’ in a Build-a-Pyramid and you haven’t got a Connection Well, you’re gonna be in Double Trouble cause we’re gonna Split & Splice your air ‘Cause what you Give is what we Take and all we do is dirty Decisions We’re the Spaceballs, What’s Next! cause we’re the Spaceballs We’re the Mixmaster of space Hey, Don’t mess Around the Block with the Spaceballs!
Have you come up with any Penny Dell Space Puzzles entries of your own? Let us know! We’d love to see them!
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Puzzles are ubiquitous. Once you start looking around for them, you’ll find them in every nook and cranny of popular culture.
Sometimes, they’re the basis for an entire episode of television, as in Brooklyn Nine-Nine or Parks and Rec. Sometimes, they serve as a linchpin metaphor, as they did in Sleepy Hollow. Other times, they’re good for a funny aside, as in Gilmore Girls, or as a prop to reveal deeper character insight, as on The West Wing.
Over the years, I’ve seen puzzles incorporated into storytelling in dozens of ways. So I shouldn’t have been surprised to stumble across puzzle references where I least expected them: the funny pages.
Yes, they’re such a part of the cultural fabric that they’ve even infiltrated comic strips.
The other day, I stumbled across this Garfield comic strip from last year:
Now, it’s meant to be funny, but I think any puzzler who has stood onstage in front of a whiteboard at ACPT, Lollapuzzoola, or another crossword tournament would agree with Jon over Garfield here.
That was one example. As it turns out, when you start digging, you find crossword gags strewn through the Garfield comics.
Like this one from November of 2005:
That’s a pretty simple gag, but it’s also a nice bonding moment for Jon and Garfield, as Jon’s rampant procrastination dovetails nicely with Garfield’s bottomless love for Italian food.
Jon has less luck making a puzzly connection in this comic from February of 1998:
If you ask me, a cookie and a crossword puzzle sounds like an excellent way to spend time with someone interesting. But I’m biased. I love cookies.
And as you can see in this comic from February of 1979, Jon’s crossword struggles have been an ongoing issue for decades now:
But it’s not just crosswords. Sudoku has gotten a fair amount of attention in the Garfield strip over the years. That’s understandable, as it’s one of the most recognizable pencil-and-paper puzzles in the world.
And as someone who isn’t the fastest Sudoku solver in the world, this series of comics from January of 2010 (an entire week’s worth!) speaks to me. I get it, Jon. I get it.
Honestly, it makes sense that Odie would have Sudoku wired. He’s a puzzle dog. He’s been appearing in crossword grids for years.
There’s a lovely callback to that previous crossword gag.
Finally, Jon triumphs! I admire both his resilience and his unwillingness to give up. Though, given that it took a week to complete a Sudoku, maybe Jon should stick to other puzzles.
You may be familiar with the board game Schmovie, hashtag games on Twitter, or @midnight’s Hashtag Wars segment on Comedy Central.
For years now, we’ve been collaborating on puzzle-themed hashtag games with our pals at Penny Dell Puzzles, and this month’s hook was #PennyDellBaseballPuzzles, mashing up Penny Dell puzzles with players, teams, terminology, and all things regarding America’s pastime!
Examples include: Right of Wade Boggs, Mookie AlphaBetts Soup, and, of course, Triple Play.
So, without further ado, check out what the puzzlers at PuzzleNation and Penny Dell Puzzles came up with!
Puzzly Players!
Railroad Ty Cobb
Ty-in Cobb
Cy-lacrostics
Daisy Dean
Satchel Solution Paige
Warren Spanners
Denard Spanners
Dwight Gooden Deal
Jeff Mixed Bagwell
Crypto-Trivias Jackson
Willie Starspell
Seaver Words
Earl Weaver Words
Pine David Cone
Bo “knows the odds” Jackson
Goose Tile
Harry Caray-Overs
KenKen Griffey, Jr.
Rollie Fingers of the Dice
IchiRoll of the Dice
Roll of the Dice-K
Ichiro Sudoku
Phil Crypto-Zooto
Go Catfish Hunter
Willie Word Maze / Word Mays / Willie Maze
The Say That Again Hey Kid
Ron Cey That Again
Let’s close out this category with some player facts!
Hall of Famers: Al Draw the Ka-line, Bill Maze-roski, and Ozzie Smith aka “The Wizard Words of Oz”
Anagram Lloyd was an important reliever in the Yankees 1996 World Series run.
The Yankees and Mets in the 1970’s had Bill Sudoku who played catcher and first base.
Puzzly Teams!
Mudville 9 of Diamonds
Arizona Nine of Diamondbacks
Arizona Diamond Rings
Tampa Bay Sunrays
Cubbles
Yan-Keyword
Puzzly Baseball Lingo!
Seventh Inning Stretch Letters
All-Starspell game / All-Star Codebreaker / All-Star Categories
If a pitcher has men on base, he may opt to pitch from the Stretch Letters.
Baseball: A Film by Kenken Burns
And, as always, there are those participants who go above and beyond in their masterful punnery!
A few offered up some puzzly calls:
And there goes Hank Aarrrooound the Block to Add One to his Homeruuuns!
Alfred got 3 books and he’s out….he should of ordered more puzzles…back to the bullpen
Naturally, we couldn’t have some fun with baseball without a certain Abbott and Costello routine getting referenced…
“GUESS WHO’s on first, WHAT’S MY NAME is on second, YOU KNOW THE ODDS is on third…”
[Note: someone else also offered “What’s Left on Second?”]
One intrepid puzzler offered this advertisement for players with, shall we say, chemistry:
Were you Suspended and Sentenced for Steroids? Did you hit too many Home Runs? Well just Dial-A-Gram 1-800 ALL-FRAMED because those are some Barry Common Bonds you have there!
We even got some pun-filled trivia!
In the old time parks like Wrigley Field and Fenway, you can see the SCOREBOARD in which they use PLACE CARDS to create a DIGITAL DISPLAY.
I’ll never forget my favorite Yogi Berra quote: When you’re coming and going to a fork in the middle of the road, take a letter.
Alas, there is simply no topping this all-time puzzly classic…
Take me out to the ALL FRAME, Take me out with the CROSS PAIRS Buy me some PATCHWORDS and CRACKERJACKS I don’t care if I never get THROWBACKS Let me root, root, root for the HOME RUNS, If they don’t win it’s a FRAMEwork, For it’s one, two, three strikes, you’re ROUNDABOUT At the old BOWL GAME
Have you come up with any Penny Dell Baseball Puzzles entries of your own? Let us know! We’d love to see them!
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Hey there, fellow puzzlers and PuzzleNationers. I’ve got a quick question for you…
Have you been solving the free daily puzzle in the Penny Dell Crosswords App that shows up every day like clockwork?
If you have been, then you’re already in the know.
But if you haven’t, you really should.
Because not only is there a terrific free crossword delivered right to your phone every single day, but every day for the entire month of June, we’re throwing in a bonus deal exclusively for PDCW solvers!
That’s right, folks! By solving the free puzzle of the day, you’ll then be notified of that day’s awesome deal! It could be a deep discount on a puzzle bundle OR a limited time offer for a rare puzzle set or app upgrade! Some of the deals are worth up to 75% off!
And the only way to find out about these fantastic deals is to solve the daily puzzle every day!
As if a free daily puzzle in your pocket wasn’t incentive enough, right?
Keep puzzling, friends!
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In this blog, I try to talk about puzzles in all their forms. We’ve explored everything from puzzle games and mechanical brain teasers to pencil-and-paper puzzles, from riddles and deduction puzzles to escape rooms and puzzle hunts. That covers a pretty impressive swath of puzzly varieties.
Now, your standard fighting game has a simple concept: two fighters go head-to-head in a match, and the first to drain his opponent’s life bar wins.
There are numerous famous fighting games across many video game systems. Franchises like Street Fighter, Mortal Kombat, Soul Calibur, Tekken, Dead or Alive, Darkstalkers, and Marvel vs. Capcom have built devoted followings with eyecatching fighters, innovative attack combos, and ever-improving graphics.
But in a puzzle fighting game, the outcome of the fight does not depend on button-mashing skill, tricky combinations, or well-timed strikes… it depends on your puzzly talents.
Take, for example, the standard bearer for the genre: Puzzle Fighter.
The layout probably looks familiar. The game combines the aesthetics of Tetris — blocks dropping into a contained play area and being rotated and placed by the player — with the gameplay of Bejeweled, Candy Crush, and other color-matching puzzle games.
You want to group pairs of blocks (or gems) together, because you can clear them from the play area by using “crash gems,” which wipe out any neighboring gems of that color. So, with proper planning, you can wipe out huge sections of your board.
As you clear gems from your play area, your fighter does battle with the opponent’s fighter, succeeding or struggling based on how well you’re doing with your puzzling. (You can play against other opponents online in multiplayer mode or against computer-controlled opponents on your own.)
Puzzle Fighter was followed by a sequel, Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo, a fun reference to the Street Fighter franchise, which also allows some of its characters to appear as sprites in this puzzly spinoff. There was also a short-lived WWE wrestling-related app that was more like Tetris in its gameplay, but similar in execution to the Puzzle Fighter series.
It’s an intriguing idea, if only because other head-to-head puzzle games like Dr. Mario and Tetris Arena feel a touch less adversarial. In head-to-head Tetris, it’s simply who’s the better puzzler. In Dr. Mario, as you eradicate the little viruses with color-matching pills, you can also bury your opponent under pill pieces, which adds a form of interaction to the gameplay.
[Watch the player on the left engineer chain reactions that hinder the player on the right.]
In Puzzle Fighter, the game goes two steps further. Not only are you allowed to visualize how you’re winning or losing based on the character sprites fighting above the play area, but your successful use of crash gems will send additional gems into your opponent’s play area, with only a limited amount of time to neutralize them.
But an upcoming entry in the genre has added a curious wrinkle to the puzzly fighting experience: magic.
The World Next Door features characters actually running across a shared game board featuring all sorts of colored runes. Your goal is to swap and connect runes of the same color so that they form chains of runes that can be activated.
Each colored rune represents a different attack, which means that, like in Dr. Mario and Puzzle Fighter, a crafty puzzler can create chain reactions where wiping out one set of runes causes another set to connect, triggering another attack.
In The World Next Door, this can lead to devastating combination attacks.
Of course, since you’re sharing a game board with your opponent, there’s the additional elements of defense and sabotage. While you’re building your rune chains, you’re going to want to defend them from your opponent while also disrupting their own attempts to form chains. Defense can truly become a strong offense, if you choose to play that way.
[Here, you can see the result of a rune spell, the small black hole in the corner, waiting for a sprite to wander too close. Image courtesy of The World Next Door.]
This is probably the most direct iteration of puzzly fighting I’ve encountered thus far, since you’re still using puzzle skills to make your attacks, but you’re also interacting head-to-head with your opponent’s game board AND sprite, which really ratchets up both the tension level and the challenge factor.
I’m definitely interested in seeing how this relatively minor subset of puzzle games continues to evolve and grow. The World Next Door is an impressive step up in complexity and style, and with this sort of creativity and innovation at play, the sky is truly the limit.
And let me know if you’d like us to discuss more puzzle apps, puzzly video games, or other related topics on the blog in the future!
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