Berd
Member
You can choose, it just can't be a piece you've used in a previous cycle.well yes but how do you do that and which peice do you switch to
You can choose, it just can't be a piece you've used in a previous cycle.well yes but how do you do that and which peice do you switch to
You can choose, it just can't be a piece you've used in a previous cycle.
But that's how you Blind solve?that would be a bit hard when meorizing having to check back through your whole memo multiple times
Nobody said it was easy . What I do is have 3 pieces I prefer to use to start new cycles, then mentally tick them off when I hit them during memo. If I have to start a new cycle I can usually remember which of my preferred pieces I've not yet ticked off. Occasionally I need to start a cycle after all three have been ticked off, in which case I have to wing it and find another, but that's rare.that would be a bit hard when meorizing having to check back through your whole memo multiple times
Nobody said it was easy . What I do is have 3 pieces I prefer to use to start new cycles, then mentally tick them off when I hit them during memo. If I have to start a new cycle I can usually remember which of my preferred pieces I've not yet ticked off. Occasionally I need to start a cycle after all three have been ticked off, in which case I have to wing it and find another, but that's rare.
Is there a speedsolving method that most directly translates to BLD solving?
Is there a speedsolving method that most directly translates to BLD solving?
Since you broke into a new cycle on S, which is on the DBL corner, as soon as you get back to a target on the DBL corner you've completed the cycle. H is also on the DBL corner, so that means after you execute H the cycle is done. I see why you would want to do N afterwards, since the red of the red-blue-white corner is in H. You just have to keep in mind though that you've already solved the red-blue-white corner, when you did Q, and now the buffer is in H (since that's where you broke into the new cycle.).
Afterwards you still have two corners unsolved (UFL and DFL) so you would need to break into a new cycle on either of those pieces and the solve them.
For example you could do this
WJK (cycle break) SQH (cycle break) LDG.
(Hope this made sense, but if it didn't I would suggest watching Noah Arthur's blind solving tutorials. He is very good at explaining some of the concepts.)
Yes, but you'll need A for edges!Next question. I'm starting to put together a letter pair list. I'm using speffz, and I think it was the wiki where I saw a list of ideas. AA, AB , AC , etc. I get that if in memo, you get GO, that means do G then do O.
So my question is, if I'm using UBL as my buffer, and that sticker is A in my letter scheme, do I skip making a list for A(any letter), because the buffer piece doesn't have to go anywhere?
Oh yeah. Lol. Never mind.Yes, but you'll need A for edges!
How are 3BLD attempts ranked in comps? Is it better to get 1 fast single and 2 DNFs or 3 meh successes?
What about MBLD?
I couldn't find anything in the regulations/guidelines
Often bo1 (at least in UK).MBLD is only ever Bo3.