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How can I get better at solving puzzles?

 
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Deception
Daedalian Member



PostPosted: Fri Dec 09, 2011 2:10 am    Post subject: 1 Reply with quote

I want to get better at these things, and I'm not sure how. I'd like to think that I'm quite intelligent given I don't have a college degree yet, but I must confess that most of these puzzles trump me forever.

Things I specifically am confused on:

Cryptography: I know some basic cryptography, but there are times when you guys decrypt a series of letters or numbers in a non-intuitive fashion from my point of view. Either there is some thought process you have, or is there perhaps a list of common/uncommon cryptographic sequences?

Well... the right track: If it is clear what the puzzle is asking me to do, then I do pretty well; but a lot of these puzzles are very vague at first glance. Sometimes just a list (scratch that, often times a list), sometimes there is even no explicit question! Are there any 'tricks' you use to help get along?

I really don't know where else to turn because I'm just not sure what to do, and seeing as this site is easily the elite of puzzle-solvers, I figured I'd post here.
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jesternl
Yankee Doodle Dutchie



PostPosted: Fri Dec 09, 2011 5:53 pm    Post subject: 2 Reply with quote

Some can be very hard, my best advice is to read over old puzzles and try and follow the steps.
Most people here will be very willing to explain the solution, as long as it's not a chestnut.
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Zag
Tired of his old title



PostPosted: Fri Dec 09, 2011 7:36 pm    Post subject: 3 Reply with quote

I do get Deception's point. It isn't that he doesn't understand the solution once it is explained, it's that he feels he never would have thought of it on his own. I know how he feels -- I never get the serial killers or the completely wide-open treasure hunt puzzles. I remember my first experience with this feeling was this puzzle, which I saw as a teen:

What do these four words have in common? Sate, Shout, Stew, Thorn

I know that I puzzled over it, trying an assortment of different ideas, before giving up. Once I saw the answer, I hit myself for not thinking of THAT, but then I realized that there must be some technique that the people who can solve those use to find the right association/trick/whatever. In years of doing puzzles, I'm convinced that there is, and that I still suck at it. Sometimes you get them because you've seen a similar association before, or you just stumble on the right thing, or whatever; it just clicks. (Anagrams of East, South, West, North.)

Deception, I would suggest doing a lot of Cryptic Crossword puzzles. They often require the same sort of lateral thinking that is needed for puzzles of this type.

But there are a few tricks -- the first one is to assume that it is solvable. That's especially helpful in this chestnut:

I have a perfect sphere, and I drill a hole straight through the center of it such that the length of the "tunnel" that is left is six inches. What is the volume of the remaining part of the sphere?

It seems that this couldn't possibly be solvable without knowing the size of the sphere or the size of the hole. But it is -- it turns out that as you increase the radius of the original sphere, the part left surrounding the tunnel gets thinner and thinner in order to remain only six inches long, and the volume remains constant. Proving THAT is a challenge, but you don't have to to solve the puzzle. As soon as you simply assume that it must be solvable, you can make some simplifying assumptions and easily come to an answer. (Just assume a 6-inch diameter sphere and a hole of approaching-zero diameter. If those values don't matter, then these are legitimate choices.)


Last edited by Zag on Fri Dec 09, 2011 8:04 pm; edited 1 time in total
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Quailman
His Postmajesty



PostPosted: Fri Dec 09, 2011 7:50 pm    Post subject: 4 Reply with quote

Zag wrote:
Sometimes you get them because you've seen a similar association before, or you just stumble on the right thing, or whatever; it just clicks.


Once you look at the answer, you must add it to your list of possible associations and consider it the next time you see a similar puzzle. For your example, before spotting the commonality I considered whether they could be written in cursive without lifting your pencil, if they reverse when written vertically and held in front of a mirror, if their homonyms had anything in common, etc.
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Vagrant
Daedalian Member



PostPosted: Fri Dec 09, 2011 11:16 pm    Post subject: 5 Reply with quote

Deception wrote:
Well... the right track: If it is clear what the puzzle is asking me to do, then I do pretty well; but a lot of these puzzles are very vague at first glance. Sometimes just a list (scratch that, often times a list), sometimes there is even no explicit question! Are there any 'tricks' you use to help get along?


These kinds of puzzles are rarely able to be solved without group input. They almost always involve suggesting possible answers for some of the clues until somebody in the group notices a pattern forming across multiple suggested answers. Once a pattern is discovered the other clues become easier because the solvers know what to look for.

As for the aha! moment in most of these types of puzzles - there's no real 'trick' to it. It either happens or it doesn't. A good puzzle creator will build some kind of hint into the puzzle. The title and/or first letters of the clues or answers are usually good places to start looking. Don't dismiss anything as unimportant.

Remember that the creators (usually) build the puzzles the other way round i.e. they start with the answer and then devise the clues to reach it. Try and think of the reasons why you would get to the point you are in the puzzle if you worked backwards - what was the creator trying to achieve?

None of that it has made me any better at solving them Revenge most foul! but maybe it will help.
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Zahariel
Daedalian Member



PostPosted: Sat Dec 10, 2011 12:41 am    Post subject: 6 Reply with quote

Finding the right path to solve a puzzle (particularly puzzle-hunt style puzzles, which seems to be what you're asking about) is one of the hardest parts of solving these puzzles. Conversely, ensuring that a puzzle that has a solve path at all is one of the hardest parts of writing a puzzle hunt. I recently participated in SEAHOP 2011, which unfortunately contained quite a few excellent example of puzzles that had essentially no solve path. (The metameta, in particular, was just criminally bad; no one solved it during the hunt.)

Vagrant is right that there isn't a trick to it really, you just have to do a lot of puzzles and practice. Most metro areas will have a few smaller-scale puzzle hunts each year; these vary in quality but usually you can manage to find a few good puzzles in any hunt. Join an MIT Hunt team as a remote member; the MIT hunt is the biggest one anywhere, and they have no limit on team size, and specifically cater to teams that are mostly remote (as long as you have a few onsite members to do runarounds). I recommend Carnegie Mellon's team, the Manic Sages, as I happen to know they always have extremely good remote-solver support. Eventually you will just start to see patterns in random collections of data. This is a sign that you are going insane (c.f. John Nash), but it's great for solving puzzles.


Last edited by Zahariel on Sat Dec 10, 2011 2:49 am; edited 1 time in total
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Scurra
Daedalian Member



PostPosted: Sat Dec 10, 2011 12:47 am    Post subject: 7 Reply with quote

Of course suggesting that someone starts with the MIT Hunt is a bit like saying "you want to learn French? Here, try this copy of Proust."

Having said that, it is probably the cream of the crop in terms of puzzle quality and learning potential (and next year will be interesting because Codex have only been waiting and planning for about ten years for the chance to write a Hunt, so I suspect that it will have had excessive testing... Extreme Delectation)
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Hitchhiker
Finally got a ride.



PostPosted: Sat Dec 10, 2011 5:09 am    Post subject: 8 Reply with quote

If you're not up to the MIT Hunt, try the archives of the much-easier Harvard hunt. Which is not to imply that Harvard is easier than MIT *nudge*

Scurra: Very much looking forward to MITMH 2012!
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LordKinbote
Daedalian Member



PostPosted: Wed Dec 14, 2011 11:54 pm    Post subject: 9 Reply with quote

I'm also looking forward to the Mystery Hunt, since, well, I'm on Codex. Revenge most foul!

Hope you guys like Pokemon. That's all I'm going to say.

So if we're talking about puzzles that don't provide instructions (like most but not all Hunt puzzles) there are several ways that you can improve.

1. One can become better at puzzles the same way that one gets to Carnegie Hall: practice, practice, practice! There are many, many outlets for this type of puzzle online...several hunts have already been named, but I recommend P&A Magazine and the Puzzle Boat, Mark Halpin's Labor Day Extravaganzas, CISRA and MUMS competitions, etc. Exposure is the only way to learn new tricks, and there while people are constantly coming up with new ways to confuse puzzlers, more often than not, puzzles are just an old way of solving with a fresh coat of paint.

2. I liked the advice about assuming that the puzzle is solvable, and by taking a leap of faith that the puzzle author intended for the puzzle to eventually fall. I'm going to butcher a quote, but I heard recently that a puzzle is a game between constructor and solver that the constructor hopes to lose. If the constructor is creating a puzzle that he hopes will never be solved, he's not doing his job and he's not providing enough information.

So, assuming that the constructor is doing his job, what information other than the puzzle text gives you clues as to how to solve it? The puzzle? Flavortext? Layout? Presentation? Any one of these might seem innocuous but might be the very key to a solve.

3. One of the best ways to get better at solving is to get better at constructing. I'm definitely a better puzzle solver at the end of this year than I was at the beginning after several months of construction under my belt (working on my fourth, fifth, and sixth MH puzzle right now). Constructing a puzzle helps you understand what kind of constraints are placed upon the construction, and you are much more likely to recognize patterns in other puzzles if you've created similar patterns for your own. I can't tell you how many puzzles I've solved this year by asking the question "Well, if I were the author, how would I have written this?"

4. Luck. Sometimes, you just need to be the right pair of eyes. What may seem confounding to you might seem trivially easy to the next person who sees it, not because they are a better puzzler, but because they have different life experiences. A couple of years ago, there was a Mystery Hunt puzzle that consisted of nothing but sets of blanks to be filled in with words, and no clues as to what words you should fill in. This puzzle confounded us until I got desperate and picked one of the sets with seven words and tried filling in the names of the seven sisters colleges. They actually fit, and spelled ALUMNAE downwards. I am certainly not one of the best solvers on our team, but I *was* one of the few people who did not go to MIT...I went to Vassar, one of the seven sisters. I sincerely doubt any other team broke into the puzzle the same way I did (some of the sets were much easier, like the seven dwarves or the names of playing cards from TWO to ACE) but my life experiences helped me find an opening.

That said, you can get luck on your side by having as broad a knowledge base as possible. A lot of the greatest puzzle solvers are a mile wide and an inch deep, as they say. They know a little about a lot of things; most professional Scrabble players couldn't define a tenth of the words they know, for example.

One thing there is not enough of out there on the interwebs is puzzle decomposition, where a skilled solver picks a puzzle and shows their train of thought as they solve it. We should do something like that here.
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Scurra
Daedalian Member



PostPosted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 12:22 am    Post subject: 10 Reply with quote

LordKinbote wrote:
I2. I liked the advice about assuming that the puzzle is solvable, and by taking a leap of faith that the puzzle author intended for the puzzle to eventually fall. I'm going to butcher a quote, but I heard recently that a puzzle is a game between constructor and solver that the constructor hopes to lose. If the constructor is creating a puzzle that he hopes will never be solved, he's not doing his job and he's not providing enough information.
This. Along with the extra observation that a solver should never look at a solution and go "how the hell were you supposed to figure out how to get from here to there?!" As a constructor this is my mantra. Every step needs to be logical and to be clued within the puzzle, even if you have to resort to clunky intro text to do so. The trick is to find that balance so that the puzzle isn't trivial but it isn't impossible either.

I often compare puzzles to illusions. The difference being that illusionists don't want you to see how their incredibly simple trick was actually done. But in the end it's all about the smoke and mirrors - disguising a technique and applying misdirection. If you've done it right, the audience will be appreciative of how they have been fooled.
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New definitions: COFFEE - someone who is coughed upon
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Zag
Tired of his old title



PostPosted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 12:22 am    Post subject: 11 Reply with quote

Sometimes just putting it down for a while is enough.

I know that I when I'm solving a Cryptic Crossword, I typically get less than 1/3 of the clue in my first try, and no more than half even when I go through them one by one, considering any known letters, etc. Invariably, if I put it down for a week and pick it back up, there will be two or three that just jump out at me, and I wonder why they were ever hard.
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Hitchhiker
Finally got a ride.



PostPosted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 1:51 am    Post subject: 12 Reply with quote

Agreed. The difference can be so dramatic after a night of sleeping on it, that you might think, "How did I get smarter since yesterday?" Or "this can't be the same puzzle as before -- but the answers are in my handwriting..."
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Scurra
Daedalian Member



PostPosted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 10:50 am    Post subject: 13 Reply with quote

Then again, Rupert Sheldrake argues that "morphic resonance" explains this. People who haven't looked at the previous day's crossword and then tackle it allegedly solve it faster than those who did it on the day... The principle being that somehow the solution is "out there" for people to sense. Revenge most foul!
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New definitions: COFFEE - someone who is coughed upon
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Zag
Tired of his old title



PostPosted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 1:00 pm    Post subject: 14 Reply with quote

I'm prepared to attribute that to bad testing (like most parapsychology experiments). They probably didn't adequately filter out the people who had solved it the previous day. In any case, the cases I noticed were old puzzles already when I first saw them.
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Suspence
Daedalian Member



PostPosted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 2:44 pm    Post subject: 15 Reply with quote

LordKinbote wrote:
One thing there is not enough of out there on the interwebs is puzzle decomposition, where a skilled solver picks a puzzle and shows their train of thought as they solve it. We should do something like that here.

I like this idea, and would love to see it done here.

One thing I wanted to mention that I find helpful for puzzle solving is writing/typing out whatever you do have, even including your thought process or why you are stuck where you are. I can't tell you how many times this has led to a breakthrough for me.
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Chuck
Daedalian Member



PostPosted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 3:22 pm    Post subject: 16 Reply with quote

How to Solve It by George Polya
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Zag
Tired of his old title



PostPosted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 8:54 pm    Post subject: 17 Reply with quote

Chuck wrote:
How to Solve It by George Polya


Did you hear about the fire in the Mathematics building? All the professors and several grad students were killed! You see, they had had a fire last month which one of the professors put out with the fire extinguisher. When this fire broke out, several of the professors went to confirm that the fire extinguisher was, in fact, in its correct spot, so they returned to their offices, satisfied with the solution.


Last edited by Zag on Sat Dec 17, 2011 5:58 pm; edited 1 time in total
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groza528
No Place Like Home



PostPosted: Sat Dec 17, 2011 4:39 pm    Post subject: 18 Reply with quote

So I'd like to expand on the "assume the puzzle is solvable" idea with a feature that also frequently occurs in other various forms of media: The Law of the Conservation of Detail. Little things that seem like they don't mean anything may be the key to the next step. "Boy, this crossword grid sure has a LOT of Xs in it." Focus on the Xs. The writer wouldn't have taken the time to put them in if they weren't important.
The other thing I recommend is to count, count, count. Sometimes something clicks because of a connection to a number. "There are exactly 26 items on this list!" Know what else there are 26 of? Look for a one-to-one correspondence. "There are the same number of blanks down at the bottom as there are sentences in the paragraph above it." Might not be a coincidence. One of the metapuzzles I saw in the last few months was broken because we realized that the answer to the puzzle was almost always exactly one letter longer than a specific other piece of information associated with the puzzle.
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ralphmerridew
Daedalian Member



PostPosted: Sat Dec 17, 2011 6:08 pm    Post subject: 19 Reply with quote

Sometimes you'll notice that most of the answers you've found are in a particular order (alphabetical is very common). Consider the possibility that all the answers are supposed to be in that order and the ones that don't fit are wrong.
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LordKinbote
Daedalian Member



PostPosted: Sat Dec 17, 2011 6:24 pm    Post subject: 20 Reply with quote

ralphmerridew wrote:
Sometimes you'll notice that most of the answers you've found are in a particular order (alphabetical is very common). Consider the possibility that all the answers are supposed to be in that order and the ones that don't fit are wrong.


Yes. If *anything* in the puzzle is in alphabetical order, it's a certainty that you're going to have to reorder.
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Scurra
Daedalian Member



PostPosted: Sat Dec 17, 2011 7:18 pm    Post subject: 21 Reply with quote

One of the other basic features is "indexing". Given that puzzles generally generate a single solution of some kind, a standard way to do it is to take a letter from each separate answer, often represented by the number of the letter within the word. Sometimes this is given directly by the puzzle, but more often you have to figure out what is going on.

Probably the most common is to use initial letters (i.e. an index number of one!) Reading diagonally may be a close second. These are probably the first things you should try.

But when neither of these work, that's when you start looking for other hints within the puzzle. Do those clues seem a bit oddly phrased, with superfluous words? Does each clue contain something that might be considered a number? Perhaps the introductory text or title contains a clue? (I wrote one once that was called "As Easy As...", and the required indexed letters appeared at positions 3, 1, 4, 1, 5 etc. Of course, the fact that all the clues/answers turned out to be related to Jackson 5 songs was misdirection...)
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New definitions: COFFEE - someone who is coughed upon
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Thok
Oh, foe, the cursed teeth!



PostPosted: Sun Dec 18, 2011 5:17 am    Post subject: 22 Reply with quote

It might be helpful to try some basic puzzles: you can get a Penny Press or Dell puzzle book with roughly 200 puzzles for 5 dollars (it's a monthly magazine, and I'm sure somebody would recommend Games magazine instead). Alternatively, http://www.janko.at/Raetsel/index.htm has an online collection that you can try. Also, there are multiple free crossword puzzles on the web.

When you do the basic puzzles, you want to try to think up general strategies that will work on multiple versions of that puzzle. Do the easy one first to build up some pattern recognition for common themes before you go to harder problems.

One of the tricks is just building up a lot of cultural knowledge. You should recognize common bits of culture, because a puzzle could be built around baseball, or movies, or common types of cheeses. Or in the case of crossword puzzles, all three of those topics and forty more.

Also, divide and conquer. If the puzzle naturally breaks into parts, look for easy parts and use that to help with harder parts. If it has a beginning and an end, work from the beginning forward and the end backwards.

Finally, just like in any RPG, talk to everybody. Somebody might give you an idea that helps.
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