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Cubing

rainman312

rice-eater extraordinaire
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Who on this forum (if anyone) cubes? As in, solves geometric/twisty puzzles such as the Rubik's Cube? I recently got into it, and figure it's a fairly INTP-ish hobby. I'd be interested to meet other cubers on here. One of the INTP-like aspects of it is that once you start, you always keep trying to solve whichever puzzle you're working on faster and faster, and it basically never ends. Seeing how many INTPs (the less-lazy ones, anyway) are the "improve myself every day" type of people, I think you guys would enjoy it.
 

Cheeseumpuffs

Proudly A Sheeple Since 2015
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I'm constantly fiddling with my cube. At this point though I don't do much at attempting to solve it better/faster, as I've pretty much hit my peak. It's become more of a muscle-memory type stress-reliever activity. It's just something for my hands to do which helps me organize my thoughts and focus and calm down and all that.
 

Ptah

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I'm a "beginner" cuber. I can solve a (sufficiently tensioned if not also lubricated) Rubik's cube in about 30 seconds, using a tweaked "beginner" (one layer at a time) method. I'm studying an F2L method, but it bores me. I'd much prefer to peak out the simpler (fewer algos) "beginner" method. As it is, I'm slowly evolving my own "opportunistic" F2L habits, so we'll see how far I can push that vs. learning a pile of patterns and algos dry/rote.

I have a 5x5 and a 7x7 I'm learning how to solve slowly, as an every-now-and-then hobby, as well.
 

Sir Eus Lee

I am wholely flattered you would take about 2 and
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I have a 2x2 all the way to a 5x5. My best is maybe 1:15 but once I saw the G perm, I gave up. I can still do it relatively fast, but I don't really care. I like using the roux method for the 3x3 but I suck at it. I rarely pick them up anymore.

Mister Eus Lee
 

rainman312

rice-eater extraordinaire
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I'm a "beginner" cuber. I can solve a (sufficiently tensioned if not also lubricated) Rubik's cube in about 30 seconds, using a tweaked "beginner" (one layer at a time) method. I'm studying an F2L method, but it bores me. I'd much prefer to peak out the simpler (fewer algos) "beginner" method. As it is, I'm slowly evolving my own "opportunistic" F2L habits, so we'll see how far I can push that vs. learning a pile of patterns and algos dry/rote.

I have a 5x5 and a 7x7 I'm learning how to solve slowly, as an every-now-and-then hobby, as well.

That's a moderately impressive time for using beginners method. I never actually learned beginner's, I just went straight to Fridrich method, with which I currently average about 20 seconds. I'm getting better quickly though. I recommend you learn F2L, but not with algorithms. You can learn it intuitively, which is what I did, and I think it makes cubing a lot more fun. You then have to figure out the most efficient way to create and insert F2L pairs, which adds an experimental aspect to cubing. It's currently what I most enjoy.

To people who have mentioned bigger cubes, what are your favorites? I have everything up to a 5x5, plus a few more weird ones (mirror blocks, megaminx, 3x3x9, fisher cube). I've been thinking about getting a 7x7, although they're fairly expensive. I'd probably get it to make patterns, as you're pretty limited on a 5x5. I feel that at a certain point, larger cubes get boring. I'd say 7x7 is probably the cut-off point. What I mean is that you're no longer adding difficulty, merely making it take longer to solve and be more tedious. That's why I tend to opt for things like the 3x3x9 (this), because it adds a considerable amount of challenge. Still, the hardest cube I've solved has actually been the Latch Cube, which is really just a 3x3 with an interesting mod (I recommend looking it up).
 

Sir Eus Lee

I am wholely flattered you would take about 2 and
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The 7x7 is, after all, just a larger 5x5, and the 6x6 is just a larger 4x4. If you havent already, check out Oskar van deventor, or however you spell his name, on youtube, specifically the mixup cube. I wish i would have tried harder to intuit the cube at first. I eventually gave up and just learned a method from a friend.

Mister Eus Lee
 
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