Bidder | Amount | Date |
---|---|---|
m****l 958 | USD 65.00 | 02/20/2022 21:07:19 |
T****e 0 | USD 60.00 | 02/20/2022 21:07:19 |
T****e 0 | USD 55.00 | 02/20/2022 15:05:12 |
Y****z 56 | USD 50.00 | 02/20/2022 15:05:12 |
Y****z 56 | USD 48.00 | 02/20/2022 11:46:16 |
m****l 958 | USD 46.00 | 02/20/2022 11:46:16 |
m****l 958 | USD 44.00 | 02/17/2022 21:35:15 |
L****s 40 | USD 42.00 | 02/17/2022 05:17:19 |
m****l 958 | USD 40.00 | 02/15/2022 01:57:15 |
Kevin Sadler wrote about it:
“I have previously described the Galette by Osanori as the hell part of packing “heaven and hell”. I had first come across the Galette puzzle as an entry in the IPP design competition in Paris at which it was one of the top ten vote-getters. I had spent quite a lot of time on it in the competition room in Paris and had singularly failed to find a solution. I had bought a copy from Tom Lensch and solved it by pure luck after months of effort back in May last year. I was interested to see whether this beautiful version by Pelikan would still be a challenge. It looks like a simple packing puzzle with 5 tetromino pieces to be inserted into the covered rectangular space inside the frame. Rotations are possible (even required) around the z-axis but there is no way to stand a piece up on its edge. This is explained by the name – Galette is French for Wafer. The extra little twist to make this really tough is that the entry to the packing space is only through a 3×2 unit space in the lid or through a 1 voxel space in the lower edge. The extra interesting feature is that the bottom edge entry is part of the pack.”