Happy New Year!

I enjoy the occasional New Year's Resolution, and this year I have a couple.

  1. No buying board games this year. Instead I will play the ones I already have. Last year I set myself a modest board game budget which kept things reasonable, but I already have many excellent games now, and I found myself more and more asking "would I rather play this new cool looking game than one of my favorite games I don't get to the table enough?"
    So this year I will put some dedicated play time into my favorite 20 solo games:

    It's a Wonderful World
    Mage Knight Board Game
    Voidfall
    Cloudspire
    Dorfromantik: The Board Game
    Endeavor: Deep Sea
    Worldbreakers: Advent of the Khanate
    Jump Drive
    Unstoppable
    Lost Ruins of Arnak
    The Castles of Burgundy
    Nusfjord
    Sleeping Gods
    Terraforming Mars
    Wondrous Creatures
    Roll Player
    Underwater Cities
    Baseball Highlights: 2045
    The Guild of Merchant Explorers
    Mechs vs. Minions
    Factory Funner
    A Feast for Odin
    Black Forest
    Fang & Flame
    Blackout: Hong Kong
    Project L
  2. Keep going with my stretching and calisthenics, reducing the amount/difficulty enough so that I can easily do three sets of each exercise each weekday. Last year I found myself procrastinating on calisthenics especially; as long as I reduce the barrier to getting started (as I did with jogging) it should be possible to keep it up this year.
  3. Come up with and write down one idea each day of the year. I thought I might try dividing the ideas into categories - puzzles, computer games, board games, stories, songs, apps, and activities. Each day of the week I'll do one of the categories to keep it varied.

Puzzle Idea #1

With that in mind, today's idea is in the field of puzzles. I've always been intrigued by the idea of fonts where the glyphs can be read as different letters depending on the direction you are reading them. In the past I've tried designing crosswords where all the clues are written as horizontal words, such that when you do vertical words you just turn the crossword sideways. I designed a blocky SVG font that had some letters that could be parsed sideways (o -> o, t -> t, l -> r, H -> I, e -> m/w, z -> n, c -> u, etc.) but the intersection rules made it difficult to actually design a "proper" crossword that worked.

So, what if I go simpler and use the font to do a "Strands" kind of puzzle instead? I could require that the letters at the bend are parseable as sideways letters. The puzzle would look odd for sure with letters in all kinds of directions. But it seems cool.

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