Sold Out
Think from the outside and build inwards to solve this puzzle.
20 balls made up of 6 straight parts. Two pieces are made from four balls, four pieces are made from three balls. Try to assemble all the pieces to a triangle base pyramid.
Sold Out
With 3 different objectives this is the perfect game for any coffee table. See how many solutions you can find for the triangle and the two three dimensional pyramids.
The triangle can be filled any of 24 ways, and once complete the pieces can be used to make a 4x4x4 pyramid using 20 balls and a 5x5x5 using all the pieces except the single ball.
$21.99
A great gift that makes an elegant decoration for any home or office.
This gorgeous pyramid is comprised of fourteen pieces. Once taken apart- can you build it again?
$19.99
A great gift that makes an elegant decoration for any home or office.
This gorgeous pyramid is comprised of five pieces. Once taken apart- can you build it again?
$9.50
Once the shape is unraveled, getting it back into a cube turns out to be much harder than it looks.
A 3 x 3 x 3 cube made up of 27 pieces linked together by a stretchy string.
Sold Out
The Last Ball
2 players
Another 3d re-imagining of a classic game. Try to be the last player to have balls remaining.
Contents:
Main Board with 16 holes
30 wooden balls: 15 dark balls and 15 light balls
Aim of the game:
To be the player to place the last ball on top of the pyramid.
Start of the game:
Each player alternately, puts a ball from his hand onto the board.
When a player makes a square of 4 of their own color they may take one or two of their balls from the board back to their hand.
At the beginning of a players turn instead of bringing a new ball from their hand they may move a ball of theirs on the board up to a square of four balls(of any color) higher on the board instead of playing a new ball from their hand.
Balls can only be moved or removed if they have no balls on top of them.
END OF THE GAME: The winner is the one who places his last ball at the top of the pyramid
Sold Out
The legend of the Towers of Hanoi refers to a stack of 64 rings that when shifted the world will come to the end. Truth be told the sun would burn out long before anyone could finish the 18 sextillion moves required.
Only moving one piece at a time, and never stacking a bigger piece on a smaller piece, move the tower from the peg on the left to the peg on the right.
The tower can always be solved in 2n-1 moves where 'n' is the number of rings used. See how few moves you can use.