Special Delivery - Don’t Open the Package

1 Comment
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package
  • Type: Point & Click and Logic
  • Difficulty: Medium
  • Replay Value: So-So
  • Controls: Mouse
Object: Deactivate the bomb in the package within 15 minutes or die.

Review: This point-and-click adventure by Tim Betrand seems a little daunting at first, but with a little bit of deductive reasoning, you can make it out alive. The game itself doesn’t involve a long drawn out series of clicking and finding objects like some adventures. Instead you have one major task…to get inside the box and find a way to deactivate the bomb. You only have 15 minutes of real time to accomplish this task.

You will mostly have to put your number logic to work to make it through. The notes and etchings inside the box provide you with most of the information you need to deduce the next step, but it still takes a little thinking and a bit of trial and error to make it through in time. Starting with the combination lock, you immediately will thank yourself for all those games of Mastermind, but the game will test other areas of knowledge including multiplication and binary numbering systems.

If you don’t make it through in time, you will blow up, but you can always try again. Another unique feature of this game is that each time you play, the combinations and some of the puzzle solutions change. So you can’t rely on memorizing the sequences, but have to start fresh each time. In that sense, the game has some replay value, although once you’ve done it, you probably won’t need to go right back and do it again. The game won’t drag on forever. You really can solve it in just a few minutes if you put your mind to it, so give it a shot and see if you can work under pressure to disarm the package.





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More Than Sudoku - 10 super puzzles

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10
  • Type of Site: Puzzles and Games
  • Subject: Puzzles
Nutshell: Conceptis provides weekly online and printable pencil puzzles. Most of them are number or logic based.
Review: I have been an avid reader of GAMES Magazine for many years. Their website is kinda mediocre, but the magazine rocks. They made popular a puzzle called Paint-By-Numbers in which users create an image on a grid using only a series of numbers in the sidebars to logically determine the placement of the various pixels in the image. Now that puzzle, along with 9 other different online puzzle games, including Sudoku, are available at a wonderful site called Conceptis Puzzles. If you love these kinds of puzzles, you simply must bookmark this site for a fantastic, weekly assortment of new puzzles.

You must sign up for a free membership to access the weekly offerings. Many of the puzzles are only available for download to print out and solve on paper, however, there are at least 5 different puzzles which can be played online. One of the great things about this site are the numerous video and text tutorials which demonstrate how to solve the puzzles and the various strategies involved.

Here’s a breakdown of all the types of puzzles you will find at Conceptis Puzzles:

Sudoku

sudokuEveryone should be familiar with this by now. Fill in the blanks with numbers from 1-9 so each row and column has one of each digit.

Battleships

battleshipsTo solve this puzzle, also made famous by Games Magazine, you use the numbers on the edges to determine the placement of several differently sized battleships.

Kakuro

kakuroThis crossword style puzzle uses numbers. Clues in the black squares give you the sum total of all digits in that row or column. You must determine the digits.

Hitori

hitoriThe object is to shade squares of numbers in a grid so that the same number doesn’t appear in a row or column more than once. Also no shaded area can touch another shaded area.

Slitherlink

slitherlinkConnect the dots surrounding each clue so that the number of lines equals the value of the clue and forms a continuous path with the other lines.

Link-a-Pix

Link-A-PixJoin pairs of numbers in a grid with a single unbroken line (often of a specific color). When you connect the right pairs of numbers a picture will form.

Pic-a-Pix

Pic-a-PixThis is based on the Paint-by-Numbers from Games Magazine. Use the number clues on the edges to determine where pixels are placed on the grid to form a picture.

Fill-a-Pix

Fill-a-PixEach number in the grid shows how many of the nine surrounding squares is filled in. Use the numbers and logic to create an image.

Maze-a-Pix

Maze-a-PixFind the true path from start to finish, like a traditional maze. Only your solution will form an image.

Dot-a-Pix

Dot-a-PixFor the younger folks, you solve these puzzles in a connect-the-dot fashion.

These puzzles are truly top notch and the online interfaces are really well-realized. New puzzles are added each week and the site provides a countdown to the day new puzzles are added at the bottom of the main page. And for almost all the puzzles you are rewarded for solving them because you get a nice little picture when you are done.

Addendum: Thanks to Leena (in the comments below) for pointing out where to access the weekly puzzles. I altered the original post to reflect that change. Check out Leena’s blog for a great pic-a-pix tutorial.

If you enjoy these types of puzzles, please consider purchasing items from Amazon.com through these links. You help out the Funhouse by shopping here.



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