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  2. Book of Challenges - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Challenges

    The encounters in the Book of Challenges include straightforward traps (such as a domed room with a hinged floor that serves as the hidden lair for a beholder).It also includes challenging logic puzzles, riddles and even role-playing encounters where combat or mechanics skills play a secondary role.

  3. Hidden Secrets: The Nightmare Walkthrough, Cheats and ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2013-04-06-hidden-secrets-the...

    Check out our tips and tricks for Hidden Secrets: The Nightmare, including screenshots with visual solutions to select puzzles. GENERAL TIPS In this game you have to find clues that will unlock ...

  4. Bedlam cube - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bedlam_cube

    The puzzle consists of thirteen polycubic pieces: twelve pentacubes and one tetracube. The objective is to assemble these pieces into a 4 x 4 x 4 cube. There are 19,186 distinct ways of doing so, up to rotations and reflections. The Bedlam cube is one unit per side larger than the 3 x 3 x 3 Soma cube, and is much more difficult to solve.

  5. Disentanglement puzzle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disentanglement_puzzle

    Most puzzle solvers try to solve such puzzles by mechanical manipulation, but some branches of mathematics can be used to create a model of disentanglement puzzles. Applying a configuration space with a topological framework is an analytical method to gain insight into the properties and solution of some disentanglement puzzles. However, some ...

  6. Sum and Product Puzzle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sum_and_Product_Puzzle

    The Sum and Product Puzzle, also known as the Impossible Puzzle because it seems to lack sufficient information for a solution, is a logic puzzle. It was first published in 1969 by Hans Freudenthal, [1] [2] and the name Impossible Puzzle was coined by Martin Gardner. [3] The puzzle is solvable, though not easily. There exist many similar puzzles.

  7. Knights and Knaves - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knights_and_Knaves

    The puzzle may also be to determine a yes–no question which the visitor can ask in order to discover a particular piece of information. One of Smullyan's examples of this type of puzzle involves three inhabitants referred to as A, B and C. The visitor asks A what type they are, but does not hear A's answer.

  8. Four fours - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_fours

    For example, when d=4, the hash table for two occurrences of d would contain the key-value pair 8 and 4+4, and the one for three occurrences, the key-value pair 2 and (4+4)/4 (strings shown in bold). The task is then reduced to recursively computing these hash tables for increasing n , starting from n=1 and continuing up to e.g. n=4.

  9. Eight queens puzzle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eight_queens_puzzle

    The eight queens puzzle is the problem of placing eight chess queens on an 8×8 chessboard so that no two queens threaten each other; thus, a solution requires that no two queens share the same row, column, or diagonal. There are 92 solutions.