MAPS, the MoMath Annual Puzzlehunt Series

Wrap-Up

The first edition of MAPS (MoMath Annual Puzzlehunt Series) was held on Saturday, November 8, from 2-5 pm in the NoMad area of New York City, starting and ending at the Museum of Mathematics. There were a total of 77 registered participants, grouped into 16 teams, ranging in size from 1 to 7.

The basic structure of the puzzlehunt was a single round with nine puzzles and a metapuzzle. The object of the hunt was to solve the metapuzzle (which could be done without solving all nine feeders). There were two tracks — Expert and Regular. Each team also had one “golden ticket” that they could use for a single free answer to a (non-meta) puzzle.

The winner of the hunt was Team Wyrm (Tracey Lin, Catherine Wu, Austin Lei), who were also the first team to finish in the Expert track. The first team to finish in the Regular track was Team Wafflesyzygy (William Chen, Yuan Jiang). A total of 13 of the 16 teams finished the hunt.

The complete list of puzzles and solutions can be found at this link.

 

Statistics

Here are some of the fun statistics from the hunt.

  • Total number of teams to finish: 13
  • Finish time for the first team: 2:59 pm (26 minutes from the start)
  • Finish time for the last team: 4:59 pm (2 hours 26 minutes from the start)
  • Number of “Expert” teams: 10
  • Number of “Standard” teams: 6
  • Number of golden tickets used: 8
  • Average number of puzzles solved before meta solve: 7.53
  • Number of teams to solve all puzzles without a golden ticket: 3
  • Funniest answer attempt: TRIGONOMETRY (by Team Limitless, for the puzzle Trigonometry)
  • Puzzle with the most solves: Set Theory
  • Puzzle with the fewest (non-golden ticket) solves: Statistics

Congratulations to all teams who participated!

 

Credits

  • This puzzlehunt was created by Rik Sengupta, an IBM Research Scientist and longtime puzzle enthusiast (and friend of MoMath).
  • A huge thanks to the playtesters and location scouts: Adree, Connor, Ian, Isabella, Jake, Jared, Kyle, Liza, Mike, Misha, Rene, Shobhita, Sohini, and the author’s parents.
  • A big thanks also to Cindy Lawrence (Director of MoMath), the Unit Circle, and all the MoMath staff, volunteers, and other wellwishers who contributed.