this post was submitted on 12 Aug 2024
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At 30 kg, it doesn't sound like a thing that anyone could reasonably play, which might answer the "why not?". But I learned from this response that the inventor of the Rubik's cube was not named Rubik, as I had assumed, so thanks and cheers👍
Edit: nvm, I looked that up and immediately ruined it for myself. Erno was his first name and Rubik was in fact his surname. Still, learning new things is fun.
I went to Budapest like 20 years ago with my brother for no reason and people were selling Rubik's everything on the street. Boxes, puzzles etc .. it was awesome. I bought a sweet weed box that took a fucking miracle to open it you didn't know how.
Oskar's treasure chest?
It was almost exactly this!
https://youtu.be/QLOlipj64J8?si=Adnqcq88E_96ssX7
Thanks for the memories!
No, it looked like a normal wooden jewelry box but a piece would slide out and reveal a key which unlocked another piece that could move revealing more inner workings ad infimum. You could always just smash it but it was a sweet coffee table piece or whatever. Dude on the street called it a Rubik's box but who knows. I paid about $2 American for it and I treasured it. When I quit smoking I gave it to my brother, who thought we were being ripped off because he didn't understand currency exchange lol.
To me the why/why not is more that it's an engineering problem rather than using it to reasonably play. At least personally that's where I find it interesting.
That's entirely fair, and to call out my own argument, not every human endeavor needs to (or should) have a utilitarian purpose. Doing stuff just because it's interesting to an individual often is generally good for the greater society.
I doubt my usual strategy of pulling the stickers off to put them in the right position would work with this beast.