Games World of Puzzles

WHITEOUT!

This story begins in a Maui convenience store way back in February 2009. As I was meandering through the aisles, I came upon a clearly misplaced issue of Games on the store’s lonely rack of periodicals. As a former avid reader of the publication, I was overjoyed to be reunited with a lost friend and bought the issue on what was the very first day of an annual trip to Hawaii.

Upon digging into the magazine that evening, I saw that the classic puzzle types like crosswords and word searches were all there, as expected. However, it was the new puzzle formats I had never seen before that really caught my eye. When I got to the pair of Helter-Skelter puzzles constructed by Frank Longo (like the ones on page 31), I did an immediate double take. Upon looking at how the provided answer to the first clue was entered diagonally in red in the 8×8 grid—and without reading the directions—I (erroneously) assumed I was looking at a crossword-type puzzle with no shaded squares. I (incorrectly) surmised that the solver had to determine in which direction each answer needed to be placed in the grid so that

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Games World of Puzzles

Games World of Puzzles3 min read
Electronic Game Reviews
ROLL-AND-WRITE BRAVO! DIGITAL EDITION OUTLINE DEVELOPMENT IOS/ANDROID: $4 ($24 TABLETOP) AGE RANGE: 4+ PLAY TIME: 10 MIN. PLAYERS: 1–2 A few years ago, veteran German designers Inka and Markus Brand took another pass at their roll- and write game Enc
Games World of Puzzles3 min read
Points Of Departure
In this variety cryptic, when clue answers disagree at a given square, resolve the conflict by entering both and adding a third letter such that new entries using all 3 letters (in any order) can be formed in both directions. For example, if CANT and
Games World of Puzzles2 min read
Paint By Numbers
These nine puzzles feature a unique blend of logic and art. The numbers are all you need to determine which squares should be filled in to form a picture. Here’s how it’s done: The numbers outside each row and column tell you how many groups of black

Related