I just finished a turtle puzzle real fast (76s) because, in my initial skim of the clues, I realised that Yoda had to be 54, thanks to two separate clues putting them at 36 years older and 36 years younger. With that, I could fill in anything related to Yoda, and the other parts just fell into place.
Mind you, if I'd had to check my maths, it would have taken longer. But I've done that puzzle enough to know that 18 is 1 step, 36 is 2 steps, 54 is 3.
Unlike contrary, above, I do read the clues after an initial skim; but that's probably why I'm usually around 100 seconds for a good solve, and contrary has the record on a lot of puzzles.
A good working memory is key to fast times - checking slows you down, but sometimes I will misremember a clue and then I'm out 600s for a bad submit and corrections.
But with practice, and a brain firing on all cylinders, and maybe a little luck in spotting the right clues first... some people can do these super fast. It has no moral value or bearing on the real world, it's just one of those things.
Mind you, if I'd had to check my maths, it would have taken longer. But I've done that puzzle enough to know that 18 is 1 step, 36 is 2 steps, 54 is 3.
Unlike contrary, above, I do read the clues after an initial skim; but that's probably why I'm usually around 100 seconds for a good solve, and contrary has the record on a lot of puzzles.
A good working memory is key to fast times - checking slows you down, but sometimes I will misremember a clue and then I'm out 600s for a bad submit and corrections.
But with practice, and a brain firing on all cylinders, and maybe a little luck in spotting the right clues first... some people can do these super fast. It has no moral value or bearing on the real world, it's just one of those things.
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