Great work explaining the dubloon thing. Exactly what I do. I'm not good at it, but that certainly should get you up to 20 or 25 points after a game or two IF you are patient!
Qasalan Caper... I was having the same problem. Basically, just focus on pushing the statue-rows so that the statues fall into a hole on just the next row down. The slower you do it, the better -if you try to throw them down a column where there are lots of open spaces, there will usually be a lyin down there. Try going back and forth to drop them down one row at a time. Also, try to hit the levers. That will shuffle everything - might be good, might be bad, but you only need to beat the first level to get the Games Master-able score.
As for Time Tunnel... Whew, this is complicated, but I'll try to simplify.
First of all, the "dots" you called them (I call them lights) don't correspond to specific rocks/buttons. If a light is green, it means one of your four buttons is the correct color AND in the correct place. If a light is orange, it means you have the right color, in the wrong place. But you don't know which one it is until you start playing around. If a light is white, it means that you don't have all the correct colors out there.
Your goal is to get all the lights "on" (either green or orange) to confirm that you have all the correct colors, and then shuffle things around, figuring out where each color belongs.
There are two methods of doing this:
1. Submit all light gray, then submit four blues, then try again with all red buttons, all black... etc. Keep track of how many greenlights you get for each color. Stop once you've seen 4 greenlights, and then, using the colors in the quantities indicated, work on getting the order correct.
2. Submit all gray. If you get any greenlights, keep that many grays, and submit blue on the rest. If you get any greenlights or orangelights, keep the correct number of grays and blues, then move on to red. Once you have lit up all your lights, shuffle the colors until you get the order correct.
Now... once you have all your lights on, you know how many of each color you need. So, for figuring out the order... some hints:
A. If you have one of one color, and three of another: just move the single color down the row, one at a time: blue-gray-gray-gray, gray-blue-gray-gray, gray-gray-blue-gray, gray-gray-gray-blue.
B: Otherwise: ONLY SWITCH TWO BUTTONS AT A TIME!!!!!! Try to think of your changes in terms of how it's different from your most successful attempt (ie, find your attempt that has the most green lights, and shuffle from there.)
If you shuffle ALL the colors around, you'll never know why the greenlights are changing. Once you have changed TWO button colors, check your lights.
If you suddenly LOSE a green - cool, you know that one of the things you changed was already the right color. Revert one of them back to its original color, and try that color on a new place altogether.*
If you suddenly gain a green - great! you know that ONE of the buttons you changed is correct now. Try switching the others and leave it alone.
If nothing happens - cool, you know that one of the ones you DIDN'T change was already in the right place, and you also know that NEITHER of the buttons you changed should be either of the colors you have just tried. (you know TWO places where those two colors don't belong).
If you suddenly gain two greens - well you lucky dog! They're both perfect and the other two are either correct (you win!) or not (just switch them).
*Yes, you could consider this as changing THREE buttons from your previous turn, but feel it is much easier to look at your best attempt (what combo produced the most greens you've ever had?), and start from there, changing only 2 buttons at a time. In fact, you can start off your turn by literally recreating that best attempt: turn the buttons so they match that attempt, (don't submit it of course - you already tried that one!) then change two of them, then submit your change.
Also, DO think of it as changing the colors of buttons or rocks that are glued into place. DON'T think of it as moving colored buttons/rocks around, or else you can get confused and accidentally "swap a red for a red"... If you think of it as "I already painted that button red, and it is wrong" there's less chance of getting confused.
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Method 1 is easier but can take more turns [thus giving fewer game points] because you're not learning anything about where the colors go: if all four buttons are currently the same color, and the color is correct for one of them, you can't tell which button is right because they're all that color. Make sense? So you are starting from scratch on the positions once you've figured out your colors.
Method 2 is a little more complicated, but if you have the hang of it, it can go faster, because you CAN start the shuffling while you're picking your colors with this method.
For instance, you try all grays and get one green.
Do gray-blue-blue-blue. You get one orange. You know that something should be gray, but not the first button, so next time, don't paint that one gray. Also, none of them should be blue.
Do red-gray-red-red. You get three greens. So, you know that you have put the gray in the right place, and two of the others are correctly red. But which ones? We'll just leave the first two red, and see.
Do red-gray-red-black. You get two greens, two oranges. You know the gray is correct. Obviously the first three buttons haven't changed, so if they were the correct ones from the previous step, you'd have four greens (three for those and of course if those three were right, the last one would have to be right too!). So, the last button should not be black or else you'd have got a greenlight for it! Paint it red, and try black elsewhere.
Voila!
Thanks to all those who voted for ethuiladdie!
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Last edited by miz sparrow on Thu Nov 30, 2006 2:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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