This is an AutoGeneratedTextVersion of BrainBurn
Brain Burn A Solitary Confinement game for the piecepack by Mark A. Biggar Version 1.0, January 2004 Copyright © 2003, 2004 Mark A. Biggar 1 player - 20 min Object This is a sliding block puzzle like the classic 15-puzzle with some aspects borrowed from Ron and Marty Hale-Evans’ game “Easy Slider”. Setup Shuffle all 24 tile suit-side down on the table and form a 5 by 5 square with the hole anywhere in the square you choose, then flip all the tiles over to the suit-side. Place the tiles loosely so that they can slide past each other easily. It will help if you orient all the tiles so that the value is right way up. Now shake all 24 coins in your hands and randomly place one coin on each tile with out looking. Flip over all the coins to the value side. You should place each coin in a corner of the tile so that the tile’s value is easily seen. Goal Your goal is the rearrange the tiles by sliding tiles one at a time into the hole while maintaining the 5 by 5 square. The tiles should be rearranged so that the Suns are in the first row, the Moons in the second, the Crowns in the third and the Arms in the fourth. Each row should be arranged so that the tiles read ace to 5, left to right. The four null tiles and the hole should end up in the fifth row, but their final order does not matter. You have one more goal, by the time you have move all the tiles in to their proper place each tile must also have on it a coin of the same value as the tile. To do this, each time a tile is moved, you may swap the coin on the moved tile with a coin on an orthogonally adjacent tile. History 20031207 mab 0.5 Solitary Confinement contest entry version 20040113 mab 1.0 Post contest version for www.piecepack.org Thank you for playing my game. Please report rules problems or variant suggestions to mark@biggar.org. Copyright © 2003 by Mark A. Biggar. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license can be found at http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl.html