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by furyofantares
4044 days ago
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My experience arriving at this solution made me a bit curious as to how others solved it. Was there reasoning involved before you arrived at a strategy and verified it, or did the strategy just come to you? Did you try multiple strategies, and if so, was there a method to generating/iterating on them, or were they just coming to you and you tried them? |
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So knowing that, I just looked for what extra, non-obvious piece of information A and B had. It seems impossible to guess what the results of a coin-flip are in another room. But the players also know the result of their own flip, and so basing a strategy on that extra info is certainly going to be the answer. From there, since there are so few combinations of such a strategy, getting the right answer is pretty trivial.
I like this brain teaser (and I suspect the reason that Felton likes it as well) because it shows this general pattern for brain teasers very clearly. The "extra" piece of information is pretty obvious with a moments thought. And once you have it, the number of possible strategies using it is small enough that you can see the correct one quickly.
A lot of other brain teasers require a lot of pen and paper work even after you've guessed the "trick" in order to work through all the possiblities. So this is sort of a nice, boiled down "essence du brainteaser".