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The Cube is a British television game show that aired on ITV from 22 August 2009 to 23 December 2021. It was hosted by Phillip Schofield.. The original series offered contestants the chance to win a top prize of £250,000 by completing challenges from within a 4m × 4m × 4m perspex cube.
The Cube is a puzzle video game both developed and published by British [1] studio Funbox Media. Based on the British game show of the same name, the game released on November 16, 2012, worldwide, for the Nintendo 3DS, the PlayStation 3, and Wii. The game also released on the Nintendo Switch on December 2, 2022.
A ladder tournament (also known as a ladder competition [1] or pyramid tournament [2] [3]) is a form of tournament for games and sports. Unlike many tournaments, which usually have an element of elimination, ladder competitions can go on indefinitely. In a ladder competition, players are listed as if on the rungs of a ladder.
The basic operation (move) consists of transferring a hinge between two tiles T 1 and T 2, from one pair of edges (E 11 of T 1 and E 21 on T 2) to another pair E 12 and E 22. Here, edges E 11 and E 12 are adjacent on tile T 1, and so are edges E 21 and E 22 on tile T 2 but in opposite order.
The game then follows by asking the person to place and describe a cube in the scene. Once the cube is completely described, the narrator of the game then asks for the player to describe a ladder that is also placed in the scene. This process continues with foliage and/or flowers, a horse, and finally, a storm.
The series premiered to over 6.3 million viewers, making it ITV's highest-rated non-scripted series premiere since The Masked Singer. With average viewing figures of 4.7 million, it was the highest rated game show of 2022. [1] The third series opened to 3.8 million viewers.
The 2×2×2 (Pocket/Mini Cube), the standard 3×3×3 cube, the 4×4×4 (Rubik's Revenge/Master Cube), and the 5×5×5 (Professor's Cube) are the most well known, as they are all available under the official Rubik's brand. The WCA sanctions speedsolving competitions for cube orders up to 7×7×7.
However, draughts with only 5 × 10 20 positions [21] and even fewer, 3.9 × 10 13, in the database, [22] is a much easier problem to solve –of the same order as Rubik's cube. The magnitude of the set of positions of a puzzle does not entirely determine whether a God's algorithm is possible.