[Note: I received a free copy of these puzzles in exchange for a fair, unbiased review.]
Forgive these somewhat shorter reviews, but it’s really hard to talk about brainteasers and puzzle boxes without accidentally spoiling them for users. So you get a two-for-one review today!
The Rubik’s Cube is one of the cornerstones of brain-teaser puzzling, but the twisty puzzles inspired by that classic puzzle continue to amaze with their innovation and cleverness. We’ve seen speed cubes, ghost cubes, 3D-printed monstrosities like the Yottaminx, and even a self-solving cube!
But I don’t know that I’ve seen a twisty puzzle that so neatly and cleanly reinvents the wheel quite like Project Genius’s Reflectron.
Unlike the same-sized cubes of traditional twisty puzzles, Reflectron’s squares are different sizes, meaning that it takes on wildly different and more mind-bending shapes with just a few twists!
As you can see, every twist makes Reflectron blockier, stranger, and more alien. The shiny reflective patterning also makes it feel more like an alien artifact you’re handling than the familiar, colorful twisty cube we’ve all seen before.
Reflectron takes this simple change and brings a whole new feel to this tactile solving experience, and I find myself idly returning to this twisty puzzle again and again. It’s a genuine treat to play with!
[Reflectron is for ages 8 and up, and it’s available from Project Genius and participating websites, starting at $14.99. It can also be found in this year’s Holiday Puzzly Gift Guide!]
While Reflectron offers many paths to a solution, our second brain teaser offers only one… and it’s a doozie.
Say hello to the Egyptian Triglyph, a puzzle that combines tactile puzzle-solving with Tetris-style block pieces, absolutely warping your brain into a pretzel with its deviousness.
A cube inside a 3D triangular frame, Egyptian Triglyph challenges the solver to disassemble the cube into its component pieces and then reassemble the cube inside the frame.
And it’s difficult to describe the vast gulf in difficulty between unraveling this puzzle and putting it back together again.
I found disassembling the puzzle relatively easy, and I enjoyed maneuvering the pieces out of the surprisingly small gaps in the triangular frame.
But even if you pay close attention to the order in which you removed the pieces, you’ll find putting them back to be quite a daunting task. I would rank it as one of the most difficult puzzly experiences I’ve ever had.
You’ll need a steady hand, a keen eye, and loads of patience and skill to put the pieces all together again. But at least it’s less messy than old Humpty Dumpty.
Egyptian Triglyph proves that putting things back the way you found them is harder than it looks.
[Egyptian Triglyph is for ages 8 and up, and it’s available from Project Genius and participating websites, starting at $17.99. It can also be found in this year’s Holiday Puzzly Gift Guide!]






























