Greetings and salutations! Have you solved this month’s perplexing puzzle? If you think you have the answer, click on the image below.
Adventures in Odyssey
Greetings and salutations! Have you solved this month’s perplexing puzzle? If you think you have the answer, click on the image below.
Greetings and salutations! In addition to determining the desired numerical sequences, this month’s puzzle asks you to build equations. Complete the grid so that each row and column contains every digit from 1 to 6 (as you would with a sudoku). However, the numbers in each shaded area also form an equation. The total is …
Puzzled by the code in our April issue? Here it is again: How It Works: This is one of the oldest codes around. It looks like a gate and is called the Pigpen Cipher. To bust it, all you do is locate where the symbol is on the code key, and use the letter indicated. …
Did you dust off a solution to April’s code? Here it is again: How It Works First, count how many letters appear in the message. In this case, it’s nine. Spell out those numbers (from one to nine) and arrange them in alphabetical order. Here’s how Matthew did it: eight, five, four, nine, one, seven, …
See if you can solve the problem! Did you find all those math problems at the end of the Jones & Parker Mystery in September 2011 issue of Clubhouse magazine? If you didn’t, here they are again: How It Works: If you’ve been busting codes for long, you’re probably familiar with this simple code key …
Having trouble with the odd message from the September issue? Here it is again: ELETDTSUYHCUS How It Works This is another sequence code—you already have the letters, you just need to put them in the correct order. Start with the middle letter, then move outward (left, right, left, right) until you reach the edges. E …
Do you “gnow” the answer to December’s gnome code? Here it is again: How It Works Split the alphabet into two groups, depending on if the capital letter contains a full-length, vertical line. Please note: — half-length lines (such as G or Y) don’t count; — slanted lines (such as A or W) don’t count; …
Did you struggle to crack October’s code? We’ve got you covered. Here it is again: How It Works Cut out the green key card. Then cut holes in the white spaces. Rotate the card 180 degrees and lay it over the letters in your magazine so the X on the card covers the X in …
Did the June code turn out to be harder than you thought? Here it is again: How It Works For each wheel, start with the line at 12:00 (or “north”). That line is the letter A. As you count clockwise, go up one letter in the alphabet for each line you cross until you hit …
Trying to figure out what the message in the grid was from the December 2010 issue of Clubhouse? Just go round-and-round to figure it out! Here it is again: How It Works: Sure, it might look like a bunch of random letters, but it’s really a spiral code! To solve it, start in the top, …
Solve a code you can’t resist from the January 2001 issue of Clubhouse magazine. If you don’t remember the code, here it is again: How It Works: First—read some resistors! Using the Resistor Color Code below, read the top two bands on each resistor to reveal a number. For instance, brown + green = 15. …
Remember the nutty code from the December issue of Clubhouse magazine? If not, here it is again: How It Works: To “crack” this code, read the letters inside nuts that are mostly round. Coolness! Just like the Christmas song says, you really can roast chestnuts over an open fire . . . and they’re good …
Did you see the mixed-up message in the March Jones & Parker Solve-It-Yourself mystery in the March issue of Focus on the Family Clubhouse magazine? If you missed it, here it is again: doN’T gET sesaME SEeDS OR LITTlE phOtO PRiNTS afTER NINE Decode this message by following these instructions: A = Don’t read it! …
Could you make sense of the gibberish in the April issue? Here it is again: Slimy Good Red The Ugly Shoe Detectives Blue Feathers On Whit’s End Read Yellow Things At Night Between Purple Can Soon Letter The Green Wait And See Lines Orange Harmonica How It Works This code tries to distract you with …
Greetings and salutations! In addition to determining the desired numerical sequences, this month’s puzzle asks you to build equations. Complete the grid so that each row and column contains every digit from 1 to 6 (as you would with a sudoku). However, the numbers in each shaded area also form an equation. The total is …
Still wondering what those Christmas lights meant in the December 2011 issue of Clubhouse? Break the code with a bright idea! How It Works: Breaking this code comes down to knowing which lights to read and which ones to ignore. Read the letters in red, yellow and blue, but ignore the rest. That’s it! Coolness! …
Greetings and salutations! Have you solved this month’s special Members’ Mag puzzle? If you think you have the answer, click on the image below. Click here for more great stories, art and poems from Clubhouse readers.
Did September’s jewelry code wear you out? Here it is again: How It Works To solve this code, study the gems to the left of each letter. They have different point values: emerald (green) = 3 ruby (red) = 2 diamond (white/blue) = 1 If there are multiple gems, add their points together. Then write …
Did you sniff out a solution to July’s flower code? Here it is again: How It Works To crack this code, first count the petals on each flower. Then read the number in the center. Match the flower to one of the letters below (the arrangement of the petals does not matter). This code is …