The Cubedex of Brass and Wood contains six puzzling machines. For some, the goal is obvious but the solution is not; for others, figuring out the goal is part of the puzzle.
## About This Game
The Cubedex of Brass and Wood is a puzzle game concerning mysterious
electromechanical devices linked by the Cubedex itself. Like puzzle hunts and
escape rooms, sometimes the goal is obvious but the solution is challenging;
and sometimes figuring out the goal is itself part of the puzzle.
## The Devices
The Balance has nine pans and eight weights:
The Cart is a Bakelite robot programmed with plug-in tubes:
The Machine has seven tubes and seven buttons:
The Maze is a light puzzle. I could write another mysterious description, but
you know what a light puzzle is. There’s always a light puzzle in these
things. It’s like catnip for puzzle designers.
The Clock doesn’t seem to tell time:
The Cubedex has six faces, but none are quite where you expect them to be, and
one holds a secret locked away:
## The Series
Jim McCann / TCHOW llc developed the Cube* puzzle games to continue his
tradition of creating midwinter puzzle hunts for his brother. The Steam
releases are the first time these tiny and frustrating puzzling worlds have
been available to a large audience, and contain significant enhancements
relative to their original (single-member-audience) releases.
The Cubedex of Brass and Wood is the first game in the main series of Cube*
puzzle games. It was created as a midwinter gift in 2015 and updated and
polished for Steam in 2020.
## The Standard Notes
Nothing in these store pages, the game web page, the game documentation, or
other materials outside the game is a puzzle.
The Cubedex of Brass and Wood is intended to be solved without
decompilation, resource snooping, or modification of game files. Indeed, these
are all considered cheating. (And, really, who are you cheating but yourself?
Once you know the answer, you can never discover it fairly.)
You will, however, benefit greatly from scrap paper, a good reference for
standard encoding schemes, and — potentially, though it is not required —
the ability to write some small computer programs to search for solutions to
combinatorial problems.
Minimum System Requirements | ||
CPU | 64-bit CPU with SSE2 | |
RAM | 4 GB RAM | |
OS | Windows 7 or later | |
Direct X | Version 10 | |
HDD Space | 150 MB available space |
Minimum System Requirements | ||
CPU | 64-bit CPU with SSE2 | |
RAM | 4 GB RAM | |
OS | Sierra 10.12 or later | |
HDD Space | 150 MB available space |
Minimum System Requirements | ||
CPU | 64-bit CPU with SSE2 | |
Graphics Card | OpenGL 3.2 or later |