Something fishy is going on with April’s code. Here it is again: How It Works This code is made entirely of fish! To break it, all you have to do is match each fishy symbol to the letter it represents. (Most symbols match the first letter of the species name.) Click here to see the …
Adventures in Odyssey
Greetings and salutations! In addition to determining the desired numerical sequences, this month’s puzzle asks you to build equations. Complete the grid so that each row and column contains every digit from 1 to 6 (as you would with a sudoku). However, the numbers in each shaded area also form an equation. The total is …
Greetings and salutations! Have you solved this month’s perplexing puzzle? If you think you have the answer, click on the image below.
Greetings and salutations! Have you solved this month’s perplexing puzzle? If you think you have the answer, click on the image below.
Greetings and salutations! In addition to determining the desired numerical sequences, this month’s puzzle asks you to build equations. Complete the grid so that each row and column contains every digit from 1 to 6 (as you would with a sudoku). However, the numbers in each shaded area also form an equation. The total is …
Did you compute the solution to May’s robot code? Here it is again: How It Works Do you see those markings on each platform? Those are Chinese numerals in calligraphy. Translated into English, they read: Arrange the robots in numerical order. Then read the letters to find the secret word. Look for a new code …
Is May’s road sign code driving you crazy? Here it is again: How It Works Concentrate on the numbers in each sign. If the number is greater than 26, skip it. If it’s somewhere between 1 and 26, convert the number to a letter using the basic substitution code (A=1, B=2 … Z=26). Coolness! Highways …
This code’s no gift—or is it? Here’s the December message again: How It Works Figuring out this code can be tricky… unless you know what to look for. Only read the letters on the tags with presents that are wrapped in solid colors (no patterns). That’s it! Coolness! The inspiration for “Secret Santa” is often …
Greetings and salutations! Have you solved this month’s perplexing puzzles? Fill in the grid below so each row, column and colored shape includes every number from 1 to 5. (That means no repeats, either horizontally or vertically.) If you think you have the answer, click on the image below. This second puzzle is even harder. …
Did December’s snowflake code give you chills? Here it is again: How It Works You’ve heard that no two snowflakes are the same, right? To break this code, look hard at each snowflake and correctly match it to the corresponding letter in the key below: Coolness! Jesus’ birth may not have been exactly the way …
Do you know what all the bugs stand for in the July 2011 issue of Clubhouse magazine? Don’t get bugged! Here’s the code again: How It Works: This is a hard one! To decipher these bugs, assign points to each insect. A fly equals five points. Each mosquito equals one point. Add the insects grouped …
Did October’s horse code throw you off? Here it is again: How It Works First rule of horseback riding: approach and mount from the horse’s left side. Read the letter on the horse’s left side (the upper letter for right-facing horses and the lower letter for left-facing horses). Look for a new code in the …
Greetings and salutations! Have you solved this month’s special Members’ Mag puzzle? Complete the grid so each row, column and three-by-three box contains every digit from 1 to 9. If you think you have the answer, click on the image below. Fill in the squares on the puzzle below with digits 1 to 8 so …
Did you line up a solution to March’s code? Here it is again: How It Works To crack this code, ignore the red and blue lines. Cover them with Wite-Out or trace the black lines onto a separate piece of paper. The black lines in each rectangle form a letter. Note to code-writers: This code …
Still a little confused by all the numbers that appeared at the bottom of the mystery in the March 2011 issue of Clubhouse magazine? If you don’t remember what the numbers looked like, here’s the entire message: Now use the chart below to fidget with these digits and take a byte out of this code! …
Greetings and salutations! In addition to determining the desired numerical sequences, this month’s puzzle asks you to build equations. Complete the grid so that each row and column contains every digit from 1 to 6 (as you would with a sudoku). However, the numbers in each shaded area also form an equation. The total is …
Could you build any words out of February’s block code? Here it is again: How It Works These blocks may look like baby talk, but they’re actually coordinates. For each pair of blocks, locate the left letter block on the table below. This will tell you which row to read. For instance, if the left …
Did you get a kick out of May’s code? Here it is again: How It Works To crack the code, simply find which letter appears most frequently on each ball. Then read the letters from left to right. “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control; against …
Did those fall leaves make any sense to you in the October 2011 issue of Clubhouse magazine? Well, just “leaf” it to a super sleuth to solve this one! How It Works: Busting this code can be easy if you know what to look for: Read only the leaves standing up straight—nothing else. Now you …
Could you work the counter at Whit’s End? It’s not as easy as you think! Serve one ice cream cone to each customer, connected either horizontally or vertically to their square. Rules: – A cone may touch multiple customers’ squares, but it belongs to one person. Nobody wants to share! – The total number of …