• Buy
Puzzle Paradise
Welcome, Guest
My Account

Sign In

Forgot username or forgot password?
No Account? Create one.
  • Home
  • Put Together (96)
  • Take Apart (65)
  • Puzzle Boxes (8)
  • Sequential Movement (72)
  • Interlocking Objects (16)
  • Sequential Discovery (6)
  • Packing Puzzles (10)
  • Puzzle Locks (6)
  • Disentanglement (11)
  • Dexterity (2)
Puzzle Paradise
  • Welcome, Guest
  • Home
  • Buy
  • Wish List
  • Sign Up / Sign In
  1. Home
  2. Sequential Discovery
ID: 108712 Closed
Listing ID: #108712 has been added to your wishlist.
ages Sequential Discovery Burr Puzzle by Brian Young
ages Sequential Discovery Burr Puzzle by Brian Young
ages Sequential Discovery Burr Puzzle by Brian Young

ages Sequential Discovery Burr Puzzle by Brian Young

mrpuzzle 27
Item Location: Australia

A$485.00

Closed
Place Bid
Minimum Bid: A$495.00 8 bids
  • Bids
Bidder Amount Date
TitoC137 12 A$485.00 14.05.2021 10:45:35
Maruel 344 A$475.00 14.05.2021 10:45:35
TitoC137 12 A$460.00 03.05.2021 23:38:29
TimmyJ 35 A$450.00 03.05.2021 23:38:29
TitoC137 12 A$425.00 03.05.2021 16:29:48
Xamuel 120 A$415.00 03.05.2021 16:29:48
TitoC137 12 A$395.00 02.05.2021 12:08:53
Xamuel 120 A$385.00 02.05.2021 06:06:17
Description

Released October 2019. 200 made. Sold out November 2019  An original design by Brian Young. Made at Mr Puzzle Australia.

 

The puzzle has never been played with other than me solving it. I have opened the puzzle and checked inside and it is working as expected. 

The puzzle is in its original box. I didn’t release it with a solution but have since circulated one to people who own the puzzle so I have printed a solution and put it with this puzzle.

 

Original Text from Mr Puzzle website:

 

The ultimate goal is to find the piece of Australiana inside the puzzle.

At the end of the solve you will find a small compartment that holds a piece of Lightning Ridge opal. Don’t get your hopes up, whilst it is a small piece of genuine opal from the Lightning Ridge opal field, the compartment is small and it’s not the Aurora Australis!

 

Looking for a simple puzzle you can solve easily? This is not going to be it.

Looking for a quick solve? That’s not going to happen.

 

This may not be the hardest puzzle in the world but if you think about the Coming of Age MkII combined with the SMS Box with fewer pieces and fewer tools. You have it!

 

The puzzle has trick locks, tools, elements of sequential discovery but essentially, it’s a very hard burr puzzle. If you’re looking for a walk in the park don’t buy this one.

 

Brian has included ideas in this puzzle that he’s never seen in a puzzle before. Solving a new puzzle often draws on previous puzzle-solving experiences so having lots of puzzles in your collection can be a big help. But the inclusion of ideas not seen before instantly bumps up the difficulty a lot.

 

The puzzle is called ages. Why?

 

Even though Brian had always designed his burr puzzles in his head he has found BurrTools to be an amazing tool to help with analysing and refining the design.

But when he first plugged some pieces into BurrTools to check for solutions Andreas Röver’s wicked sense of humour was immediately obvious. Time left: ages

In fact, the full analysis of the selection of pieces has never been completed in BurrTools. Time left: unknown -> days -> years -> millennia -> ages Who knows how long it might take?  Once he found a few designs with more than 30 moves to remove the first piece he thought that would be enough.

 

The design of the puzzle was first started in 2010, a whole year before IPP31 in Berlin, plenty of time to design what was going to be the Berlin Beer Burr.

Brian then hit upon the idea for the Houdini puzzle and Berlin being where Houdini performed the famous Torture Cell act it just seemed the right time to make that puzzle and that it should be given in the Berlin IPP31 exchange and as a result, the Berlin Beer Burr (now named ages) got shelved.

So Brian’s had plenty of time to revisit and redesign the original burr and that process seems to have taken ages right? Yet another reason for the name.

 

This is not a binary burr even if it seems to have some of the elements. All the moves are random. That makes it less predictable to solve. And the burr has no frame; even the Coming of Age MkII pieces are technically making a frame which is how they can get so many moves. But how to get so many moves without a frame and still keep it stable while you play with it? Brian thinks he has done that here.

 

The first burr piece can be removed without any rotational moves but things are not so straightforward after that. Although Brian has left some rotational moves in the puzzle there is definitely no force required to rotate them so if it’s a tight fit then it probably isn’t meant to rotate. More than half the pieces have been strengthened with splines but don’t forget this puzzle is made of wood, not metal so no undue force, please.

 

All tools have been provided to do this puzzle. No external tools and no hitting is required.

 

Brian’s favourite puzzles have always been high-level burrs. He created the Coming of Age MkII in 2000 because he liked the mystery of where multiple steps can lead you; towards a solution or to a complete dead-end from which you must then navigate back. Similar to a sequential discovery puzzle where you step towards the solution. It’s just that with sequential discovery there is the added dimension of tools.

 

Size: 110mm x 110mm x 110mm

 

Materials: The puzzle is made of Queensland Silky Oak & Western Australian Jarrah wood and includes magnets and brass parts.

 

General Information:

 

I know I don’t have much feedback but this is Brian & Sue Young aka Mr Puzzle auctioning these puzzles. If you’re concerned then contact me separately via the Mr Puzzle Australia website to confirm.

But please don’t email and ask to discontinue the auction. All auctions will run their duration. It’s the fairest course for everyone.

 

All prices in Australian Dollars (not US Dollars).  We accept payment via PayPal with no fees.

 

The puzzles will be shipped from us here in Australia and we’ll send a PayPal invoice after the auction is closed. If you buy more than one item we’re happy to combine ship and quote based on weight.

Cost to ship this puzzle Standard:

Australia/NZ 14.00

US/Canada/UK/Asia 18.00

France/Germany/Italy 20.00

Other Europe & Rest of the World 30.00

 

Payments & Returns
Payment Methods
PayPal
Post Message
Sign in to ask the seller a question.
Yubisaki Annai IN IPP30 Takeyuki Endo
mrpuzzle 27
Yubisaki Annai IN IPP30 Takeyuki Endo
It looks like it should be a burr. In fact it’s an unusual packing puzzle.Designed and made by Takeyuki Endo.  He made the puzzle in 2010 as his exchange puzzle for IPP30.Goal: Pack the 6 pieces inside the cross shaped cage.  One piece is still outside the cage as it’s presented.Size: The cage is 70 x 70 x 70mmMaterial: The cage is lacquered woods. The pieces are plain wood. Condition:  The puzzle is made by Takeyuki Endo himself. There’s a couple of small marks that seems to b...
€20.00
1 bid
Place Bid
Play 2 Cube Ten by Takeuyki Endou
mrpuzzle 27
Play 2 Cube Ten by Takeuyki Endou
9 varied board and block shapes must be assembled into a cube shape.  Designed in 1999 and made in Oct 2001 by Takeuyki Endou.One of the pieces is hand marked by T. Endou with Play 2 Cube No 38 and is signed and dated.Goal: Assemble the 9 pieces into a cubeSize:  95x95x95mmMaterials: woodCondition: The puzzle is loose and unassembled in a zip lock bag. It has the original sealed solution from Takeuyki Endou (sometimes just spelt Endo) dated October 2001 inside.General Information:This is Brian...
€20.00
0 bids
Place Bid
Impossible Needle
mrpuzzle 27
Impossible Needle
Created by Markus Gotz for IPP26. Not an exchange puzzle.Goal: How was the item made?Size:  the needle is 40mm longMaterials: needle and threadCondition: The puzzle is as it was given out in original box. General Information: This is Brian Young from Mr Puzzle in Australia selling some doubles as a result of merging Ray Mead’s collection into my own existing collection. If you have questions please email me separately via our Mr Puzzle email address mrpuzzle@mrpuzzle.com.au  B...
€5.00
1 bid
Place Bid
Iso Crate metal puzzle made by Bits and Pieces
mrpuzzle 27
Iso Crate metal puzzle made by Bits and Pieces
A metal puzzle designed by Robert Rose and made by Bits and Pieces. The puzzle has eight pieces and each piece has 3 magnets in it. Goal: Assemble the 8 pieces into a cube.One corner has a groove taken out of it that can be used to stand the puzzle on its edge.  It will stand there.Size: Final cube is 45x45x45mmMaterials: Anodised Aluminium with magnetsCondition: Reasonable.  The pieces look a bit roughly made and some magnets are not sitting perfectly flush. The plating is not perfect either...
€10.00
0 bids
Place Bid
View All

Links

  • Guidance & Rules
  • Site Fees
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact Us
Puzzle Paradise
Powered by PHP Pro Bid. ©2026 Online Ventures Software
Our website uses cookies. By continuing, you consent to the use of cookies on your device, unless you have disabled them from your browser.