this post was submitted on 23 Oct 2023
7 points (100.0% liked)
cubers
311 readers
6 users here now
Community for all things speedcubing or twisty puzzle related. Cubers and non-cubers are welcome! Drop by our welcome post to introduce yourself or send any suggestions for the community.
Rules
- Follow server's Code of Conduct
- Be kind to others
- No NSFW posts (family friendly community)
- Zero tolerance policy for any kind of harassment
Useful links
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I'm annoyed that I've only just found this community. I'm not using Reddit anymore, but I have gone back to the Cubers subreddit a few times. I quit Reddit and started Cubing together at the start of summer, Cubing was my Reddit replacement.
So I just found this community today and see it's a graveyard with zero discussion. Which sucks! I want to talk about cubing with people.
IRL the addition of a cube to my biker/metal head look has left a lot of people confused lol. I have a friend that used to cube but he never replies, and there's a guy at my kids school that has solved in front of an Assembly but I've yet to meet him.
Anyway, ramble ramble, Hi there anyone alive?
Hi there, and welcome.
There is a few cubers here but yeah, it’s pretty quiet…
Anyway, what method do you use? do you compete? are you a speedsolver, a collectionner, both?
I'm a CFOP man but Roux interests me, I just can't seem to wrap my head around the last algs yet.
I guess I'm a speed solver, just a slow one. I'm nearly 40 and just wanted something to occupy my mind rather than Reddit (social media in general) and it's certainly done that. Currently I'm working through learning OLL, then it's PLL which is apparently easier.
I like being able to stand at a bar 6 beers in and solve a cube in a minute or two with one eye shut, and I like that I had no clue how to do this 3 months ago and now I'm faster than the majority of people at it
Huh, I've always seen people recommend learning PLL before OLL. Hope that's going well for you, anyway. I'd recommend you learn algs that work well for you rather than whatever your source suggests (check some algs out over on algdb.net).
Also, you may want to check out the Speedsolving Forums. I've used them and here to supplement my lack of visiting the cubing subreddit.
Thanks for the algdb.net link, looks like a good site. I'm using https://www.speedcubedb.com/a/3x3/OLL atm because I like that it tells you how to set the alg up too, but I've bookmarked your link.
There's this https://www.reddit.com/r/Cubers/comments/tygask/learn_oll_the_easy_way/?share_id=d53oqI0G9XwOvG9JN9kXi&utm_content=1&utm_medium=android_app&utm_name=androidcss&utm_source=share&utm_term=1&rdt=32907
Which is a great little resource, just a pity it's on Reddit.
OLL seemed to make more sense to me because I already know some of them, and the rest seem to be variations of them, so I just need to remember that THIS case does this, but if it looks like THAT then I vary it like THIS.
PLL just makes my brain hurt, hopefully OLL will help with that.
I didn't know about this site and, just from skimming it a bit, I'm impressed. I've just come back to cubing after a 3-year long pause and didn't catch up with the times, so thanks for the link, I've bookmarked it also.
Yeah, sucks to be a cuber and wanting to be away from Reddit, because the r/cubers sub was actually one of my favorites.
It definitely will. Some PLLs are just combinations of shorter OLLs (take the T perm, which is a sequence of a T OLL and a fish-shape OLL), so it'll definitely help you out. Also, the fact that there're way fewer algs in the PLL set will make it a breeze (hopefully) after you grind through OLL, so maybe that'll help out your motivation. Still, I think it's a bit odd to learn OLL first, but it seems fine and even good now that I think about it.
Yeah the speedcube db is great because it's all in sections so you can pick say Fish Shapes and just concentrate on them.
As for PLL or OLL first debate, I'm already doing 2 look so the idea is to get down slowly to 1 look. I keep going back to Guitar analogies and it doesn't really matter the order on Guitar that you learn once you have a solid foundation. I really am treating Cubing the same way.
When I get bored of OLL I'll go to PLL and switch back again. It's a way of staving off the boredom while teaching my muscle memory.
I'm already at a point where I'm getting a little frustrated at forgetting some OLLs so it won't be long. Thanks to you I'm learning T perm first
Seems like that link has been saved in wayback machine: https://web.archive.org/web/20220407160539/https://www.reddit.com/r/Cubers/comments/tygask/learn_oll_the_easy_way/
just for backup or if we don't want to go back to reddit
Hey thanks that's great, I've just gone and saved that to my home screen on my phone.
Also it may not be as active in here but my original intention was to stir up some activity and it seems to have worked. I've talked more about Cubing this week than ever before and that is good enough for me.
In my opinion, if you time yourself, you’re a speedsolver. I’m older than you (43), but I know that I won’t reach sub-15 since I can train "properly". I’ll be happy to be sub-20 !
Learning 78 algs (even though I knew more than half of the PLL) was definitively a deal-breaker for me. Even with CMLL I struggle to reco the pattern and then reco the alg associated… I know that I lack practice, but I’m glad other methods exist ! (I looked at Petrus and Heise before Roux).
The LSE stage? At first, you can go without algs. Here how I process it:
After CMLL, the last step is divided into 3 parts:
4a: If you take the time to analyse EO, you’ll see it’s really simple. Let’s say that top/bottom is yellow and white:
If you don’t know yet, arrow case is 3 non-white/yellow on top, and 1 non-white/yellow on bottom. Once you have an arrow, you do M'U*M*, with *=' or *=nothing (or MU*M* depending on the arrow facing you or not)
Except for the 6 flipped-edges, there are 3 cases that are not solved/arrow cases:
ex1 both on top
ex2, symmetrical to ex1
ex3 both on top again
ex4 1top, 1 bottom
ex5 1 top, 1 bottom, diag case
ex6 1 top, 1 bottom, same face
ex7 1 top, 1 bottom, same face2
ex8 2 bottom
You can see that in a lot of cases, the last M can be M'. But I like to keep it simple ;)
For the 6 flipped edges, either you learn an alg, or you M*U*M* to reduce to only 2 flipped: example
See also the flow chart in https://rouxl.es/lse.html
4b: in this step, your U and D faces should have yellow/white stickers only.
The goal is to finish the left and right sides (that is, put UL and UR). In order to do that, the easiest way, is to put UL/UL both in D, adjust the U face, do M2, and put U correctly.
In all other case, we first bring them diagonally of each other on the M slice.
And then M* U2 M* to bring them both on D:
ex1
ex2
ex3
And then you finish with AUF,M2,AUF
Sometimes, you can merge the two steps:
ex4
That can happen when one of UL/UR are between L/R corners. I’ll let you experiment with it.
4c: L and R are solved now. You just have to permut M edges now.
There is really only 3 cases: bars, dots, and cycles.
ex 2x2 is yellow-blue, 1x2 are green-white, and yellow-green, and then 1x1 is white-blue.
You’ll have to do U2 with the 1x1 without breaking the 2x2.
In the example, if you do U2, you’ll break the blue line of the 2x2, so you first have to do M
Doing so, you will have a 1x3 line (here white line) and a 2x3 block (here with yellow line).
Then you bring the 1x3 on top, U2 ( and sometimes M*)
Hope it helps
This is the first comment I've bookmarked on Lemmy. There's a lot here, thanks. I'll defo be coming back to it
Hi! I'm also here from Reddit and created this community because I enjoyed the subreddit back then. It's nowhere near as active but I hope we can create a good community here too.
Work is a bit busy these days so I'm less active and cube less these days.