Richard Wolfrik Galland
Autor/a de Lewis Carroll's Puzzles in Wonderland
Sobre l'autor
Sèrie
Obres de Richard Wolfrik Galland
Nikola Tesla Puzzle Collection, an Electrifying Series of Challenges, Enigmas, & Puzzles (2015) — Autor — 72 exemplars
The Leonardo da Vinci Puzzle Codex: Riddles, Puzzles and Conundrums Inspired by the Renaissance Genius (2014) — Autor — 48 exemplars
Pride & Prejudice & Puzzles: Ingenious Riddles & Vexing Dilemmas Inspired by Jane Austen's Novels (2018) 36 exemplars
The Knights of the Round Table Puzzle Quest: Riddles, Conundrums & Puzzles Inspired by the Legend of King Arthur (2016) 8 exemplars
Catan Puzzle Book: Explore the ever-changing world of Catan in this puzzle adventure (2020) 8 exemplars
Leonardo da Vincis Rätseluniversum Rätsel und Denkspiele inspiriert vom Renaissance-Genie (2018) 3 exemplars
Etiquetat
Coneixement comú
- Gènere
- male
- Llocs de residència
- Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England, UK
- Educació
- University of Brighton (BA|Applied Linguistics)
- Professions
- games designer
- Organitzacions
- Games Workshop (magazine editor)
Hasbro (games designer)
Carlton Books (project editor)
Warm Acre Games (owner)
Sabrewolf Games (owner)
Membres
Ressenyes
Potser també t'agrada
Autors associats
Estadístiques
- Obres
- 19
- Membres
- 316
- Popularitat
- #74,771
- Valoració
- 3.7
- Ressenyes
- 4
- ISBN
- 54
- Llengües
- 7
A number of quotes from Tesla are included, and some random snippets of biographical nature (his mother's death, his love affair with a pigeon, etc.) but otherwise the puzzles are only superficially related to anything about him, if that. There are a few riddles that require some lateral thinking to solve. Some involve algebra where the "variables" are shown as gadgets. Many of the puzzles are simple variations of the same puzzle (predict the next shape in a series, or fit a number into a grid, or rotating shapes to fit the pattern). None are particularly challenging, although some require grunt work to slog through to a solution. Some are a little ambiguous where a solution might be thought of, but not the one they were looking for because they didn't detail the problem sufficiently. The observation/memory puzzle where one gazes at a collection of items then turns the page for another image of them, and attempts to identify which have changed places is a little misleading: not only do they change places but they are sometimes enlarged or reduced in the process and the differences between them is slight.
Overall, I found many of the puzzles seemed like make-work and skipped over the later variations. The riddles were usually worthwhile and I at least tried some of each type of puzzle, but in the end just read through all the Tesla quotes.
TL;DR: Not "The Nikola Tesla Puzzle Collection", but "Puzzles and Riddles with Some Tesla Quotes Interspersed"
Gaming the book seems redundant when reviewing a game book.… (més)