h a l f b a k e r yI CAN HAZ CROISSANTZ?
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On the first day, you have either a black, blank square or a white one. This is the bottom right corner of the crossword. You may or may not have a clue, depending on whether it's a letter square or a black one.
On the second day, you have three squares, which may be black or white. If an low-numbered
clue is for a sufficiently long word, you may receive one or two clues at this point.
On the third day, you get five squares.
And so it continues until at the end of the week you're given thirteen squares. From this point the rest of the crossword can be predicted, but not the precise positions of each clue's starting point, so from then on you just get X,Y coordinates for each clue number plus the clues themselves.
You get extra points for predicting the crossword pattern and may be able to fill the words in beforehand. However, a guess cannot be taken back. Unless you record the sequence of squares in some way, they're lost until the end of the game.
This is delivered online, by email or even by post, and takes thirteen days to complete.
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Very interesting. The idea itself, of course. |
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But also about three days ago I was musing over the possibility of some kind of "smart paper" application for crossword puzzles. |
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I came up with a tentative approach suitable for the 'bakery, but decided not to follow through on it. |
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I wonder if some kind of word game virus is going around. |
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My partner does crosswords a lot. Sitting by them, it occurred to me that as well as the Times crossword, which we don't do, there could also be a "time crossword", but I didn't want to post the obvious four dimensional idea so you got this. |
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