Ooh, I just thought of something! SETs!
AKHTBN iff its colors are either all different or all alike, and it contains three pyramids of the same size or one of each size, and the pyramids are all in the same orientation or all in different orientations.
White koans:
a red House (treehouse starting setup)
Three upright large pieces of different colors.
Black koans:
two small blue pyramids pointing at a medium yellow between them.
Green large pointing up, Yellow large pointing up, Blue large pointing right.
Anyone in your group who's played Set should catch on. A third example of each might help, though. Maybe also remove one color so there's three possibilities for each value.
~nupanick (or other appropriate name)
===================
Guvf VF zl jvggl fvtangher.
On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 10:04 PM, Nick Lamicela
<nupanick@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
sounds fun. I'll do that now and post again when I think I've got something.
~nupanick (or other appropriate name)
===================
Guvf VF zl jvggl fvtangher.
On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 9:16 PM, Christopher Hickman
<tophu@xxxxxxx> wrote:
Geniuses,
I'm helping my sister-in-law design a puzzle for her D&D campaign, and she'd like to use a Zendo-like (VERY Zendo-like) puzzle to protect a vital treasure room. I've designed the room, but I just need the perfect rule and four koans...
Here's the setup:
This semi-circular room contains six pillars arranged in an arc in alternating colors of black and white. Atop each of the two columns on the far left and each of the two columns on the far right sits three large crystal pyramids each, in various orientations and designs. Scattered beside the two empty columns flanking the door that sits at the midpoint of the arcing room, one black and one one, lie several more crystal pyramids. In the center of the large stone door hangs a circular stone button carved with three triangular shapes.
The challenge is to build a koan atop each of the empty columns using exactly three of the pyramids from the floor for each, one that matches the rule on the white column and one that does not on the black. We have here a sort of "meta rule" that says a koan is not even valid (it is neither black nor white) if it contains more or less than three pyramids (the stone button does nothing when pressed in that situation, while the door opens if correct koans are placed and a chain golem assembles itself and attacks if an incorrect set of koans is in place).
Please help me design the rule and the koans, making sure that there is a valid solution from the leftover pyramids, assuming Rainbow 3HOUSE, minus the black (nine pyramids each of red, yellow, blue, and green).
Anyone up for the challenge?
Topher_______________________________________________
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