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  2. Maze: Solve the World's Most Challenging Puzzle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MAZE:_Solve_the_World's...

    Maze: Solve the World's Most Challenging Puzzle (1985, Henry Holt and Company) is a puzzle book written and illustrated by Christopher Manson. The book was originally published as part of a contest to win $10,000. Unlike other puzzle books, each page is involved in solving the book's riddle.

  3. Maze generation algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maze_generation_algorithm

    Make the wall a passage and mark the unvisited cell as part of the maze. Add the neighboring walls of the cell to the wall list. Remove the wall from the list. Note that simply running classical Prim's on a graph with random edge weights would create mazes stylistically identical to Kruskal's, because they are both minimal spanning tree algorithms.

  4. Maze-solving algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maze-solving_algorithm

    Robot in a wooden maze. A maze-solving algorithm is an automated method for solving a maze.The random mouse, wall follower, Pledge, and Trémaux's algorithms are designed to be used inside the maze by a traveler with no prior knowledge of the maze, whereas the dead-end filling and shortest path algorithms are designed to be used by a person or computer program that can see the whole maze at once.

  5. List of puzzle topics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_puzzle_topics

    Chess puzzle. Chess problem; Computer puzzle game; Cross Sums; Crossword puzzle; Cryptic crossword; Cryptogram; Maze. Back from the klondike; Ball-in-a-maze puzzle; Mechanical puzzle. Ball-in-a-maze puzzle; Burr puzzle; Word puzzle. Acrostic; Daughter in the box; Disentanglement puzzle; Edge-matching puzzle; Egg of Columbus; Eight queens puzzle ...

  6. Maze - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maze

    A maze is a path or collection of paths, typically from an entrance to a goal. The word is used to refer both to branching tour puzzles through which the solver must find a route, and to simpler non-branching ("unicursal") patterns that lead unambiguously through a convoluted layout to a goal.

  7. Picture maze - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picture_maze

    A style of pen-and-paper picture maze popularized by Japanese publisher Nikoli, known as ukidashi meiro or PictoMazes, involves solving a maze puzzle in the regular way, drawing a path from the entrance to exit of the puzzle, avoiding the dead ends. The shape of this shortest path - particularly if emphasized by coloring in the grid squares ...

  8. Dave Phillips (maze designer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dave_Phillips_(maze_designer)

    Dave Phillips (born May 7, 1951) is a maze and puzzle designer, and writer of The Zen Of The Labyrinth—Mazes For The Connoisseur. [1] Phillips has provided puzzles for Reader's Digest, Highlights, National Geographic World, [2] Die Zeit, Ranger Rick, Omni, Games, Scientific American, and United Features Syndicate.

  9. Adrian Fisher (maze designer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adrian_Fisher_(maze_designer)

    Adrian Fisher MBE is a British pioneer, inventor, designer and creator of mazes, puzzles, public art, tessellations, tilings, patterns and networks of many kinds.He is responsible for more than 700 mazes in 42 countries since 1979.