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1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50
- 6 by 6
Tower
- Billion
Barrel
- Brain
chek
- Circle
Puzzle
- Circus
Puzzler
- Cmetric
mini
- Cohan
Circle
- Diamond
8 ball
- Dino Cube
- Dots

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6 by 6 Tower is actually called
Babylon Tower, or the Ivory Tower. This puzzle is a
sliding piece puzzle which consists of several discs stacked up into a
tower, and they can rotate about a central axle. This version was
originally made by Jaap
Scherphuis and more information on the puzzle can be found from his Babylon
Tower pages. |

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Brain chek This puzzle was invented
by Steven Kunreuther, and it
consist of a 5x4 square grid, and a slider that can move along the
edges of that grid. Each square has a dial, spot or other marker that
changes whenever the slider moves along an edge of that square. This
version was originally made by Jaap
Scherphuis and more information on the puzzle can be found from his
Brain chek pages. |
Circle Puzzle

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Circle Puzzle This puzzle is a
simple puzzle consisting of four overlapping circular disks in a square
arrangement. Each disk overlaps with the two adjacent disks but not
with its diagonally opposite disk. This version was originally made by Jaap
Scherphuis and more information on the puzzle can be found from his Circle
Puzzle pages. |
Circus Puzzler
Cmetric mini

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Cmetric mini This puzzle consists
of a frame containing a 3×3 array of coloured balls. If you rotate any
ball to the left or right, all three balls in the same row are rotated
in the same way. If you rotate a ball up or down, then the balls in the
same column rotate with it. The aim is of course to get all the balls
in the same orientation, so that they show the same colour on the front
and sides. This version was
originally made by Jaap
Scherphuis and more information on the puzzle can be found from his
Cmetric pages. |
Cohan Circle
Diamond 8 ball
Dino Cube

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Dino Cube This puzzle has eight axes
of rotation centred around the corners. Its cutting planes go
diagonally through the square faces, cutting off triangular pyramidal
corners. There are twelve moving pieces, one on each edge of the cube.
It is called a dino cube because it originally had pictures of
dinosaurs on the sides. This version was
originally made by Jaap
Scherphuis and more information on the puzzle can be found from his Dino Cube pages. |
Dots

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Dots Make more boxes than the computer to
win this interactive JavaScript game, the original version can be found
from The JavaScript Source
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| ©
2007-2008 Jukka Silvennoinen |
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