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...ina in 1982 under the name Batalla Naval, with the first published puzzles appearing in 1982 in the Spanish magazine Humor & Juegos. Battleships was created by Jaime Poniachik, founder of Humor &a...
Hi, all! I need help completing the following puzzle from a magazine. What are the words and who is the mystery guest?
Directions: Here are ten partially completed words. You are to fill in the blan
Enigma 1313 - Triangles New Scientist Magazine, 30 October 2004. by Keith Austin.
Draw a triangle ABC. On the side AB mark the point P such that AP=(2/5)AB, on BC mark Q such that BQ=(2/5)BC and on
Enigma 1314 - Times table New Scientist magazine, 6 November 2004. by Susan Denham.
From a full set of dominoes, I have taken just those that have a 1, 2, 3 or 4 at each end. I then arranged them in
Enigma 1301 - Magicless square New Scientist magazine, 7 August 2004. by Susan Denham.
You are probably very familiar with magic squares such as:
8 1 6 in which you have to place the numbers 1 to
Enigma 1311 - Minimal clockspan New Scientist magazine, 16 October 2004. by Michael Slater.
I have a clock with a sweep second hand, and I watch how the three hands - hour (H), minute (M) and second
...; these puzzles can be composed based on any partition of the square into 9 sections of 9 cells each. Games magazine has printed a set of these puzzles from time to time in the last while, and each se...
Having been a GAMES magazine reader for most of my life, I can't help but brag just a little bit here. The upcoming December 2004 edition (the 'Buyer's Guide' issue), features a six page article about
Enigma 1300 - Numeros triangulares New Scientist magazine, 31 July 2004. by Richard England.
This puzzle has appeared as an Enigma puzzle in both English and French versions, but incredibly it also
Enigma 1308 - Passing through New Scientist magazine, 25 September 2004. by Richard England.
If you are told to draw a rectangle along the lines of a sheet of graph paper such that its area is 40 sq
Enigma 1305 - Buzz New Scientist magazine, 4 September 2004. by Richard England.
In the game of buzz the players form a circle and count in turn, the first saying '1', the next '2', the next '3' and
Enigma 1307 - KO, OK? New Scientist magazine, 18 September 2004. by Susan Denham.
Sixteen players numbered 1 to 16 entered a men's knockout tennis tournament. In each round the numbers of the remain
...his hands, and has submitted correct solutions to the last 45 weekly Enigma problems from the New Scientist magazine. If George has just won his second 30 pound prize (drawn at random from the correct...
Enigma 1304 - Some obvious facts New Scientist magazine, 28 August 2004, by Susan Denham.
You know that:
* NINETY is divisible by 9,
* TEN is 1 more than a perfect square divisible by 9,
* the
Enigma 1303 - Lucky numbers New Scientist magazine, 21 August 2004. by Haydon Bambury.
Alex and his big sister Monica were using a new method to work out their lucky numbers. First they chose at ran
Enigma 1302 - Luncheon meet New Scientist magazine, 14 August 2004. by Bob Walker.
As the crow flies, Joe lives 5 miles from each of his friends Ken and Les, who live 8 miles apart. Every Sunday lun
Enigma 1299 - Pipe dreams New Scientist magazine, 24 July 2004. by Ian Bell.
A pipe manufacturer ships pipes of 3 different radii in the same, square-section, box. The pipes just touch each other an
Enigma 1298 - Odd change New Scientist magazine, 17 July 2004. by Susan Denham.
I have some coins in my purse whose total value is less than 1 pound stirling. I have tried to make various totals usi
Enigma 1306 - Three all New Scientist magazine, 11 September 2004. by Adrian Somerfield.
I have in mind three numbers each of three digits (no leading zero) in each of which one digit is 3. Of the f
Enigma 1309 - Fill, cut and fit New Scientist magazine, 2 October 2004. by Keith Austin.
Amber and Ben have a new game which they play on this board.
Hi all,
I was wondering if anyone else is working on this puzzle for Games Magazine - I am stuck on only 3 of them and would love to exchange
interested
Thanks!
Now that December 3 has passed, those of us who worked on Games magazine's Common Factors contest (October issue) can talk about it. For my part, I got distressingly close to a solution, though of cou
Hi! Occasionally I come across, in various magazines, puzzles like this:
Arrange the digits 1-9 in such a way that their sum is 100.
or
Adding only 2 additions and 2 subtractions to the followin
...asking if identical twins always have the same blood type. I asked that question because I read in a trivia magazine that they do not always have the same type. The explanation was that enviornmental ...
...onfirm the confirmation. etcetera etcetera....
is there a way a1 and a2 can EVER attack? according to the magazine where i found this there is a way (a certain message at a certain time or something...
...ILL AMAZE YOU BAFFLE YOU AND THESE GIFTS WILL AMAZE PEOPLE IN YEARS TO COME? HAVE BEEN PUBLISHED IN VARIOUS MAGAZINES AND VARIOUS BRAND NAME COMPANYS HAVE MY PRODUCT THESE YOU CANNOT BUY THEY ARE MADE...
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