Tilt Mazes |
| Heres an example: Suppose the first move you make in Maze 1 is to tilt the west edge of the board down. The marble will now roll all the way to the west side of the board. Then on the next move, suppose you tilt the south end down. The marble will roll south until it hits a barrier. Then suppose you tilt the east end down. The marble will now roll east all the way across the board until it hits the east side. And so on. Andrea created these mazes as Java programs for her web site. I saw that the mazes would also work on the printed page. Usually mazes work better as interactive computer programs. But when you play one of these programs, youre apt to just try one thing after another, and without much thought. You might solve the maze, but you may not understand whats going on. When a maze is on a printed page [or when its in a non- Click here for Andreas home page. She currently has about 20 tilt mazes and has mazes of many other types.
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Click here for the Java version of Maze 2 | Click here for the Java version of Maze 3 |
Click here for the Java version of Maze 4 |
A Recent Development July, 2001:In addition to the Tilt Mazes shown on this page and the interactive versions on Andreas site, we now have an ultimate implementation: a Tilt Maze you can actually walk through! Andrea drew the maze for the American Maze Company, and they built it next to their cornfield mazes at Cherry Crest Farm, near Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and at Long Acre Farms, near Rochester, New York.The picture below shows the maze at Cherry Crest Farm (and thats my wife Ann in the maze). They called it the Straight Ahead Maze (you must keep going straight ahead until you reach a wall). Tilt Maze didnt work as a title here, because, well, you cant really tilt the ground. This maze lasted only through the summer of 2001, but it will probably appear next to other cornfield mazes during the summer of 2002 and later. |
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