mscroggs.co.uk
mscroggs.co.uk

subscribe

Puzzles

18 December

The final round of game show starts with £1,000,000. You and your opponent take it in turn to take any value between £1 and £900. At the end of the round, whoever takes the final pound gets to take the money they have collected home, while the other player leaves with nothing.
You get to take an amount first. How much money should you take to be certain that you will not go home with nothing?

Show answer

Tags: numbers, games

Turning squares

Each square on a chessboard contains an arrow point up, down, left or right. You start in the bottom left square. Every second you move one square in the direction shown by the arrow in your square. Just after you move, the arrow on the square you moved from rotates 90° clockwise. If an arrow would take you off the edge of the board, you stay in that square (the arrow will still rotate).
You win the game if you reach the top right square of the chessboard. Can I design a starting arrangement of arrows that will prevent you from winning?

Show answer

Placing plates

Two players take turns placing identical plates on a square table. The player who is first to be unable to place a plate loses. Which player wins?

Show answer & extension

More doubling cribbage

Source: Inspired by Math Puzzle of the Week blog
Brendan and Adam are playing lots more games of high stakes cribbage: whoever loses each game must double the other players money. For example, if Brendan has £3 and Adam has £4 then Brendan wins, they will have £6 and £1 respectively.
In each game, the player who has the least money wins.
Brendan and Adam notice that for some amounts of starting money, the games end with one player having all the money; but for other amounts, the games continue forever.
For which amounts of starting money will the games end with one player having all the money?

Show answer & extension

Doubling cribbage

Brendan and Adam are playing high stakes cribbage: whoever loses each game must double the other players money. For example, if Brendan has £3 and Adam has £4 then Brendan wins, they will have £6 and £1 respectively.
Adam wins the first game then loses the second game. They then notice that they each have £180. How much did each player start with?

Show answer & extension

Twenty-one

Scott and Virgil are playing a game. In the game the first player says 1, 2 or 3, then the next player can add 1, 2 or 3 to the number and so on. The player who is forced to say 21 or above loses. The first game went like so:
Scott: 3
Virgil: 4
Scott: 5
Virgil: 6
Scott: 9
Virgil: 12
Scott: 15
Virgil 17
Scott: 20
Virgil: 21
Virgil loses.
To give him a better chance of winning, Scott lets Virgil choose whether to go first or second in the next game. What should Virgil do?

Show answer & extension

Tags: numbers, games

Archive

Show me a random puzzle
 Most recent collections 

Advent calendar 2023

Advent calendar 2022

Advent calendar 2021

Advent calendar 2020


List of all puzzles

Tags

numbers dice quadratics symmetry crossnumber pentagons sums cubics taxicab geometry ave polynomials unit fractions sets digital products calculus addition probability multiplication crosswords percentages coins polygons lines coordinates hexagons routes bases division functions means clocks mean 3d shapes perfect numbers regular shapes gerrymandering the only crossnumber graphs geometric mean shape range volume tournaments pascal's triangle cryptic clues probabilty christmas arrows grids triangle numbers area digits fractions tiling trigonometry tangents perimeter crossnumbers differentiation multiples dodecagons surds circles advent products quadrilaterals irreducible numbers partitions consecutive integers dates star numbers 2d shapes chalkdust crossnumber determinants rugby triangles parabolas cards folding tube maps cube numbers expansions chess sum to infinity doubling integers spheres elections planes averages wordplay odd numbers factorials sport menace speed prime numbers median people maths squares matrices chocolate ellipses integration number balancing axes scales binary angles digital clocks albgebra palindromes geometric means dominos cryptic crossnumbers even numbers decahedra algebra indices logic books geometry consecutive numbers colouring factors square numbers rectangles complex numbers shapes floors time sequences money square roots combinatorics remainders games proportion

Archive

Show me a random puzzle
▼ show ▼
© Matthew Scroggs 2012–2024