Sherlock Holmes and The Hound of The Baskervilles

Sherlock Holmes and The Hound of The Baskervilles

View Stats:
anedra 4 Nov, 2014 @ 12:31pm
That one puzzle
All the puzzles in this game are easy to moderate, but the one that unlocks Charles' door (24 squares with a star in the middle) seems way more difficult than the rest. Maybe it's just me, but I've played through the game many times over the years, and always had to resort to the walkthrough for that one.
< >
Showing 1-14 of 14 comments
ZenDarkCloud 7 Dec, 2014 @ 8:45pm 
im on it now.. any tips?
Tanidar 8 Dec, 2014 @ 4:34am 
there are some video walktroughs on youtube helping to solve it. I also had problems with this puzzle.
T-wRecks 13 Dec, 2014 @ 9:03am 
First, get the corners and the tiles horizontally next to them aligned, which should be easy enough. Then just start working your way to the middle a tile at a time. By using the edge rotation vs a rotation in the middle you can isolate rotation to 2 or 3 tiles, 1 of which you're aligning and the others you'll get later. You rotate the tiles you've already aligned 4 total times and include the one you're working on the number of times it needs to align. By this method you can work it down to the 4 center tiles.

To get a center tile, do the similar method using the 3x3 from a corner to the piece you want in the opposite corner to align it. This will leave the 2 tiles outside it unaligned, but you can use the previous methods to realign those 2 at the same time, since they're "in sync". Repeat for the other 3 center tiles and you're done.

I realize this isn't the clearest description, but hope someone can follow it and be helped. >.<
PROMETHEUS 20 Dec, 2014 @ 3:34am 
4
If your still stuck this is what I did today.

To solve the puzzle, please click on the tiles in the following order:

Tiles numbered left to right
Line 1: 1 2 3 4 5 6
Line 2: 7 8 9 10 11 12
Line 3: 13 14 15 16 17 18
Line 4: 19 20 21 22 23 24

1 x2, 3 x1, 4 x1, 5 x1, 6 x2, 1 x2, 4 x2, 2 x2 .
5 x2, 16 x1, 13 x2, 16 x2, 14 x2, 17 x2, 19 x2 .
21 x3, 22 x3, 24 x3, 19 x2, 22 x2, 20 x2, 23 x2.
9 x2, 3 x2, 21 x2, 10 x3, 4 x1, 22 x1, 11 x3.
5 x1, 23 x1 -12 x1, 6 x3, 24 x3, 1 x3, 4 x3- 19 x3.
22 x3, 7 x1, 10 x1 , 8 x3, 11 x3, 2 x1, 5 x1, 20 x1, 23 x1.
barondeghost 14 Aug, 2015 @ 1:13pm 
Thank you so much, Prometheus.
MakoSipper 25 Sep, 2015 @ 2:00pm 
2
3
1
Thanks, PROMETHEUS. But since you can take 4's out and order doesn't matter, I've simplified your solution:

1 x 3 // 2 x 3 // 3 x 3 // 4 x 3 // 5 x 1 // 6 x 1
7 x 1 // 8 x 3 // 9 x 2 // 10 x 0 // 11 x 2 // 12 x 1
13 x 2 // 14 x 2 // 15 x 0 // 16 x 3 // 17 x 2 // 18 x 0
19 x 3 // 20 x 3 // 21 x 1 // 22 x 1 // 23 x 0 // 24 x 2

I've included tiles you don't have to move so you can be sure I didn't miss them.
Last edited by MakoSipper; 25 Sep, 2015 @ 2:00pm
TH 14 Nov, 2015 @ 7:07pm 
thank you!
SaturdayXIII 14 May, 2016 @ 8:34pm 
Duck this puzzle. *posted from phone*
Banake 24 Aug, 2019 @ 6:16pm 
Originally posted by MakoSipper:
Thanks, PROMETHEUS. But since you can take 4's out and order doesn't matter, I've simplified your solution:

1 x 3 // 2 x 3 // 3 x 3 // 4 x 3 // 5 x 1 // 6 x 1
7 x 1 // 8 x 3 // 9 x 2 // 10 x 0 // 11 x 2 // 12 x 1
13 x 2 // 14 x 2 // 15 x 0 // 16 x 3 // 17 x 2 // 18 x 0
19 x 3 // 20 x 3 // 21 x 1 // 22 x 1 // 23 x 0 // 24 x 2

I've included tiles you don't have to move so you can be sure I didn't miss them.

Thanks.
Doppelganger4827 15 Dec, 2019 @ 12:19am 
Thanks! It has to do with planning your rotations, but nobody got time fo dat! :gentleman:
Beulu 6 Jun, 2020 @ 8:23am 
Originally posted by MakoSipper:
Thanks, PROMETHEUS. But since you can take 4's out and order doesn't matter, I've simplified your solution:

1 x 3 // 2 x 3 // 3 x 3 // 4 x 3 // 5 x 1 // 6 x 1
7 x 1 // 8 x 3 // 9 x 2 // 10 x 0 // 11 x 2 // 12 x 1
13 x 2 // 14 x 2 // 15 x 0 // 16 x 3 // 17 x 2 // 18 x 0
19 x 3 // 20 x 3 // 21 x 1 // 22 x 1 // 23 x 0 // 24 x 2

I've included tiles you don't have to move so you can be sure I didn't miss them.


Simply perfect. :)
Photiel 31 Dec, 2024 @ 6:05am 
Thank you! I spent a lot of time on this one...to no avail.
mittens 7 Jan @ 7:07pm 
From someone who doesn't know how to solve Rubik's cubes, this one feels like Rubik's cube logic to me. slightly different of course but same idea. any perspective on this puzzle from Rubik's cube people? is it harder than a cube, or easier? or about the same? simply curious
Angel 10 May @ 11:43pm 
Originally posted by MakoSipper:
Thanks, PROMETHEUS. But since you can take 4's out and order doesn't matter, I've simplified your solution:

1 x 3 // 2 x 3 // 3 x 3 // 4 x 3 // 5 x 1 // 6 x 1
7 x 1 // 8 x 3 // 9 x 2 // 10 x 0 // 11 x 2 // 12 x 1
13 x 2 // 14 x 2 // 15 x 0 // 16 x 3 // 17 x 2 // 18 x 0
19 x 3 // 20 x 3 // 21 x 1 // 22 x 1 // 23 x 0 // 24 x 2

I've included tiles you don't have to move so you can be sure I didn't miss them.
Thank you from a decade later!
< >
Showing 1-14 of 14 comments
Per page: 1530 50