"Not Quite Shakespeare" by benchen71
- HeadinHome
- Posts: 1276
- Joined: Sun Apr 26, 2020 9:06 am
- Location: Charlotte, NC
I came, I saw, I stormed the castle!
So well suited to my knowledge was this endeavor
That it seeméd very like a birthday gift.
(Yes, today I inexorably increase by one). Brought back fun memories of school days. Thanks!
So well suited to my knowledge was this endeavor
That it seeméd very like a birthday gift.
(Yes, today I inexorably increase by one). Brought back fun memories of school days. Thanks!
The other Wendy.
- Jeremy Smith
- Posts: 1108
- Joined: Thu Apr 11, 2019 5:45 pm
- Location: Tampa Bay area
- benchen71
- Posts: 2919
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2021 8:50 pm
- Location: Melbourne, Australia
- Contact:
Happy birthday!HeadinHome wrote: ↑Tue May 14, 2024 6:01 pm I came, I saw, I stormed the castle!
So well suited to my knowledge was this endeavor
That it seeméd very like a birthday gift.
(Yes, today I inexorably increase by one). Brought back fun memories of school days. Thanks!
Check out "The MOAT Mini Pack of Marching Bands" here. US$5 gets you 7 Marching Bands which, hard enough on their own, now contain metas too. And once again there's a mega-meta!
- benchen71
- Posts: 2919
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2021 8:50 pm
- Location: Melbourne, Australia
- Contact:
We are near the end of the first 24 hours of play, and 48 solvers have found the meta answer!
woozy
Dow Jones
Tom Wilson
Danny K Bernstein
Pair O Ducks
Berto
Ergcat
boharr
DCBilly
edestlin
Cindy Weatherman
JM
LarsCaine
MatthewL
Meg
lbray53
I K Snamhcok
kymike
Dave C
Hector
ajk
Carolyn
DrTom
Darth
rjy
lindaPRmaven
kurtalert
heidi
CPJohnson
Cindy Heisler
Alex Sisti
Tyrpmom
DIS
Steve M
Jaclyn
Philip Chow
BMW
Devoid
An Ephemeral Collation
markhr
KayW
Turtle
Laura M
HeadinHome
Jeremy Smith
Tim
DebbieC
imontoo
woozy
Dow Jones
Tom Wilson
Danny K Bernstein
Pair O Ducks
Berto
Ergcat
boharr
DCBilly
edestlin
Cindy Weatherman
JM
LarsCaine
MatthewL
Meg
lbray53
I K Snamhcok
kymike
Dave C
Hector
ajk
Carolyn
DrTom
Darth
rjy
lindaPRmaven
kurtalert
heidi
CPJohnson
Cindy Heisler
Alex Sisti
Tyrpmom
DIS
Steve M
Jaclyn
Philip Chow
BMW
Devoid
An Ephemeral Collation
markhr
KayW
Turtle
Laura M
HeadinHome
Jeremy Smith
Tim
DebbieC
imontoo
Check out "The MOAT Mini Pack of Marching Bands" here. US$5 gets you 7 Marching Bands which, hard enough on their own, now contain metas too. And once again there's a mega-meta!
- Abide
- Moderator
- Posts: 1496
- Joined: Thu Apr 11, 2019 11:16 pm
- Location: Biloxi
- Contact:
Got the first part and correctly assumed where to find the second part...
The site is just a web page, a meeting place, a clubhouse - it's the group that's special.
—Brian MacDonald
—Brian MacDonald
- whimsy
- Posts: 3153
- Joined: Sun Jun 21, 2020 9:51 am
- Location: Hopkinton MA
Crossed.
But perhaps not quite as gentle a crossing as DrTom's --
Very enjoyable (and "classic"?) puzzle, Ben -- Thanks!
But perhaps not quite as gentle a crossing as DrTom's --
Very enjoyable (and "classic"?) puzzle, Ben -- Thanks!
- benchen71
- Posts: 2919
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2021 8:50 pm
- Location: Melbourne, Australia
- Contact:
Solver update!
BuzzingCow
Emily
Waann
Johnny Luau
hoover
Eric H
atsiricajr111191
rayyandroid
Abide
whimsy
We're at 58 now. Nudges imminent!
BuzzingCow
Emily
Waann
Johnny Luau
hoover
Eric H
atsiricajr111191
rayyandroid
Abide
whimsy
We're at 58 now. Nudges imminent!
Check out "The MOAT Mini Pack of Marching Bands" here. US$5 gets you 7 Marching Bands which, hard enough on their own, now contain metas too. And once again there's a mega-meta!
- benchen71
- Posts: 2919
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2021 8:50 pm
- Location: Melbourne, Australia
- Contact:
Nudges, in order of increasing blatancy:
1.
2.
3.
4.
1.
2.
3.
4.
Check out "The MOAT Mini Pack of Marching Bands" here. US$5 gets you 7 Marching Bands which, hard enough on their own, now contain metas too. And once again there's a mega-meta!
-
- Posts: 399
- Joined: Thu Aug 25, 2022 4:33 pm
- Location: Ottawa, Canada
- Cap'n Rick
- Posts: 1739
- Joined: Sun Aug 02, 2020 12:44 pm
- Location: Nahant, MA
Nice job, Ben - (even if I did need a nudge or two).
- benchen71
- Posts: 2919
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2021 8:50 pm
- Location: Melbourne, Australia
- Contact:
Solver update:
Mr Tex
omnilynx
Eric H
Adam Simon Levine
Anonymous Crossharer
Qmark
Capn Rick
That's 65. Last update will be Monday morning Aussie time right before the answer reveal.
Mr Tex
omnilynx
Eric H
Adam Simon Levine
Anonymous Crossharer
Qmark
Capn Rick
That's 65. Last update will be Monday morning Aussie time right before the answer reveal.
Check out "The MOAT Mini Pack of Marching Bands" here. US$5 gets you 7 Marching Bands which, hard enough on their own, now contain metas too. And once again there's a mega-meta!
- benchen71
- Posts: 2919
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2021 8:50 pm
- Location: Melbourne, Australia
- Contact:
No new solvers, so here's the solution to "Not Quite Shakespeare":
The seed for this puzzle was encountering CAPLET in someone else's crossword and thinking, "Oh, that's one letter short of CAPULET. That could be a meta puzzle!" But it wasn't until I was on a school camp accompanying 10 high schoolers as we canooed down the Murray River, sleeping in tents on beaches at night, that I started working on the puzzle properly. What was significant about this was that there was absolutely no internet. So I had to dredge my mind for Shakespearean character names that still formed valid words when you drop one letter. Pretty early on I worked out I wanted to spell MUCH ADO with ZIP/NIL in the centre of the grid. Of course I already had the U. PU(C)K came pretty easily, as did VIOL(A) and ROME(O). But I was stuck on M, H and D. Then one restless night (I didn't sleep very well on the wafer-thin semi-inflatable microscopic "mattress" I had been given) I came across (D)UNCAN and its clue involving whoop-ass. I considered (H)ORATIO, but could only think of ORATORIO so dismissed it. It wasn't until I was back in civilisation (somewhere with internet) that I was able to confirm ORATIO as a (Latin) thing and discover that (M)ARIA was a Shakespearean character, albeit somewhat obscure.
The seed for this puzzle was encountering CAPLET in someone else's crossword and thinking, "Oh, that's one letter short of CAPULET. That could be a meta puzzle!" But it wasn't until I was on a school camp accompanying 10 high schoolers as we canooed down the Murray River, sleeping in tents on beaches at night, that I started working on the puzzle properly. What was significant about this was that there was absolutely no internet. So I had to dredge my mind for Shakespearean character names that still formed valid words when you drop one letter. Pretty early on I worked out I wanted to spell MUCH ADO with ZIP/NIL in the centre of the grid. Of course I already had the U. PU(C)K came pretty easily, as did VIOL(A) and ROME(O). But I was stuck on M, H and D. Then one restless night (I didn't sleep very well on the wafer-thin semi-inflatable microscopic "mattress" I had been given) I came across (D)UNCAN and its clue involving whoop-ass. I considered (H)ORATIO, but could only think of ORATORIO so dismissed it. It wasn't until I was back in civilisation (somewhere with internet) that I was able to confirm ORATIO as a (Latin) thing and discover that (M)ARIA was a Shakespearean character, albeit somewhat obscure.
Check out "The MOAT Mini Pack of Marching Bands" here. US$5 gets you 7 Marching Bands which, hard enough on their own, now contain metas too. And once again there's a mega-meta!
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