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[Member Intro] New Roux learner on board

Wondercito

Member
Joined
Oct 6, 2021
Messages
2
Location
USA
Hi everyone, I'm really new to cubing, but I'm a fast learner. After a few weeks working on Roux I made a time of 2:58 today, on my non-magnetic cube, which for me seems great, but I know it's incredibly slow by speed cubing standards. I have hopes to improve a lot from this point. I really like Roux because of the ergonomic feel. When I was a kid in the '80s (I'm old), I memorized the old-fashioned solution but it was nowhere near as easy and quick as the solutions these days.

Anyway thanks for having me and looking forward to learn more! For now I've been really focused on solid finger-trick technique, doing movements slowly to build muscle memory. I spend a lot of time just building pairs and blocks so I'll be able to see those patterns more quickly during F2B. And also working on tracking for FB, which is quite hard for me, for some reason.

My brother bought me a Gan which is coming next week, so I can compete online but I doubt anyone would match up at my slow level.

By the way, any suggestions on a good "beater" cube for travel... I've been comparing various MoYu and QiYi models, haven't decided if I want magnetic or not. It seems like a good idea to master without magnets first, which is what I've been doing. But maybe a light magnet feel... I was looking at the MoYu Weilong GTS3 LM (light magnetic), has anyone tried that one?

Another crazy idea I have is to get a miniature keychain-size speed-cube (probably MoYu) and put little dots, lines, circles etc. on each face using drops of glue. This way, I could maybe learn to solve it without looking, for example in the dark or when looking out the window of the bus...

One other thing, I wish there were a back-lit cube but I can't seem to find one anywhere. Apparently people have manually modified them to put LEDs inside. It seems like there would be a market for a fully backlit speedcube.

Anyway I'm excited to join this community and I have tons of respect for the discipline and effort that goes into cubing. I don't know if I will ever get below 1 minute, but hopefully so, given enough time.

Happy cubing...
--Jordan
 

abunickabhi

Member
Joined
Jan 9, 2014
Messages
6,701
Location
Yo
WCA
2013GHOD01
YouTube
Visit Channel
Hi everyone, I'm really new to cubing, but I'm a fast learner. After a few weeks working on Roux I made a time of 2:58 today, on my non-magnetic cube, which for me seems great, but I know it's incredibly slow by speed cubing standards. I have hopes to improve a lot from this point. I really like Roux because of the ergonomic feel. When I was a kid in the '80s (I'm old), I memorized the old-fashioned solution but it was nowhere near as easy and quick as the solutions these days.

Anyway thanks for having me and looking forward to learn more! For now I've been really focused on solid finger-trick technique, doing movements slowly to build muscle memory. I spend a lot of time just building pairs and blocks so I'll be able to see those patterns more quickly during F2B. And also working on tracking for FB, which is quite hard for me, for some reason.

My brother bought me a Gan which is coming next week, so I can compete online but I doubt anyone would match up at my slow level.

By the way, any suggestions on a good "beater" cube for travel... I've been comparing various MoYu and QiYi models, haven't decided if I want magnetic or not. It seems like a good idea to master without magnets first, which is what I've been doing. But maybe a light magnet feel... I was looking at the MoYu Weilong GTS3 LM (light magnetic), has anyone tried that one?

Another crazy idea I have is to get a miniature keychain-size speed-cube (probably MoYu) and put little dots, lines, circles etc. on each face using drops of glue. This way, I could maybe learn to solve it without looking, for example in the dark or when looking out the window of the bus...

One other thing, I wish there were a back-lit cube but I can't seem to find one anywhere. Apparently people have manually modified them to put LEDs inside. It seems like there would be a market for a fully backlit speedcube.

Anyway I'm excited to join this community and I have tons of respect for the discipline and effort that goes into cubing. I don't know if I will ever get below 1 minute, but hopefully so, given enough time.

Happy cubing...
--Jordan
Woah nice to have another Roux cuber on board.

Happy cubing, M U2 S' U' S D' S' D S M' U' !
 

Rubuscu

Member
Joined
Dec 30, 2020
Messages
120
Location
Kolkata, India
Welcome. I admire your optimistic nature, and I assure you that you will average under 1 minute very soon, given you practise a bit.
 

PetrusQuber

Member
Joined
Jun 27, 2019
Messages
3,460
Location
my house, cubing.
YouTube
Visit Channel
Hi everyone, I'm really new to cubing, but I'm a fast learner. After a few weeks working on Roux I made a time of 2:58 today, on my non-magnetic cube, which for me seems great, but I know it's incredibly slow by speed cubing standards. I have hopes to improve a lot from this point. I really like Roux because of the ergonomic feel. When I was a kid in the '80s (I'm old), I memorized the old-fashioned solution but it was nowhere near as easy and quick as the solutions these days.

Anyway thanks for having me and looking forward to learn more! For now I've been really focused on solid finger-trick technique, doing movements slowly to build muscle memory. I spend a lot of time just building pairs and blocks so I'll be able to see those patterns more quickly during F2B. And also working on tracking for FB, which is quite hard for me, for some reason.

My brother bought me a Gan which is coming next week, so I can compete online but I doubt anyone would match up at my slow level.
Eh, matters about having fun and beating personal bests a lot of the time
By the way, any suggestions on a good "beater" cube for travel... I've been comparing various MoYu and QiYi models, haven't decided if I want magnetic or not. It seems like a good idea to master without magnets first, which is what I've been doing. But maybe a light magnet feel... I was looking at the MoYu Weilong GTS3 LM (light magnetic), has anyone tried that one?
IMO there’s not much point in going without magnets, because it trains you to adapt to not having them regarding finger tricks and algorithms, so when you do get a magnetic cube, you’ll have to readjust more (plus, most cubes are magnetic nowadays).
What’s your budget?
Another crazy idea I have is to get a miniature keychain-size speed-cube (probably MoYu) and put little dots, lines, circles etc. on each face using drops of glue. This way, I could maybe learn to solve it without looking, for example in the dark or when looking out the window of the bus...

One other thing, I wish there were a back-lit cube but I can't seem to find one anywhere. Apparently people have manually modified them to put LEDs inside. It seems like there would be a market for a fully backlit speedcube.

Anyway I'm excited to join this community and I have tons of respect for the discipline and effort that goes into cubing. I don't know if I will ever get below 1 minute, but hopefully so, given enough time.

Happy cubing...
--Jordan
good luck!
 
Joined
Sep 24, 2021
Messages
281
Location
Somewhere on Earth
YouTube
Visit Channel
Hi everyone, I'm really new to cubing, but I'm a fast learner. After a few weeks working on Roux I made a time of 2:58 today, on my non-magnetic cube, which for me seems great, but I know it's incredibly slow by speed cubing standards. I have hopes to improve a lot from this point. I really like Roux because of the ergonomic feel. When I was a kid in the '80s (I'm old), I memorized the old-fashioned solution but it was nowhere near as easy and quick as the solutions these days.

Anyway thanks for having me and looking forward to learn more! For now I've been really focused on solid finger-trick technique, doing movements slowly to build muscle memory. I spend a lot of time just building pairs and blocks so I'll be able to see those patterns more quickly during F2B. And also working on tracking for FB, which is quite hard for me, for some reason.

My brother bought me a Gan which is coming next week, so I can compete online but I doubt anyone would match up at my slow level.

By the way, any suggestions on a good "beater" cube for travel... I've been comparing various MoYu and QiYi models, haven't decided if I want magnetic or not. It seems like a good idea to master without magnets first, which is what I've been doing. But maybe a light magnet feel... I was looking at the MoYu Weilong GTS3 LM (light magnetic), has anyone tried that one?

Another crazy idea I have is to get a miniature keychain-size speed-cube (probably MoYu) and put little dots, lines, circles etc. on each face using drops of glue. This way, I could maybe learn to solve it without looking, for example in the dark or when looking out the window of the bus...

One other thing, I wish there were a back-lit cube but I can't seem to find one anywhere. Apparently people have manually modified them to put LEDs inside. It seems like there would be a market for a fully backlit speedcube.

Anyway I'm excited to join this community and I have tons of respect for the discipline and effort that goes into cubing. I don't know if I will ever get below 1 minute, but hopefully so, given enough time.

Happy cubing...
--Jordan
Great to have a ROUX learner on board. Happy cubing!
 

hellocubers

Member
Joined
Jul 20, 2021
Messages
723
Location
a country on Earth.
Hi everyone, I'm really new to cubing, but I'm a fast learner. After a few weeks working on Roux I made a time of 2:58 today, on my non-magnetic cube, which for me seems great, but I know it's incredibly slow by speed cubing standards. I have hopes to improve a lot from this point. I really like Roux because of the ergonomic feel. When I was a kid in the '80s (I'm old), I memorized the old-fashioned solution but it was nowhere near as easy and quick as the solutions these days.

Anyway thanks for having me and looking forward to learn more! For now I've been really focused on solid finger-trick technique, doing movements slowly to build muscle memory. I spend a lot of time just building pairs and blocks so I'll be able to see those patterns more quickly during F2B. And also working on tracking for FB, which is quite hard for me, for some reason.

My brother bought me a Gan which is coming next week, so I can compete online but I doubt anyone would match up at my slow level.

By the way, any suggestions on a good "beater" cube for travel... I've been comparing various MoYu and QiYi models, haven't decided if I want magnetic or not. It seems like a good idea to master without magnets first, which is what I've been doing. But maybe a light magnet feel... I was looking at the MoYu Weilong GTS3 LM (light magnetic), has anyone tried that one?

Another crazy idea I have is to get a miniature keychain-size speed-cube (probably MoYu) and put little dots, lines, circles etc. on each face using drops of glue. This way, I could maybe learn to solve it without looking, for example in the dark or when looking out the window of the bus...

One other thing, I wish there were a back-lit cube but I can't seem to find one anywhere. Apparently people have manually modified them to put LEDs inside. It seems like there would be a market for a fully backlit speedcube.

Anyway I'm excited to join this community and I have tons of respect for the discipline and effort that goes into cubing. I don't know if I will ever get below 1 minute, but hopefully so, given enough time.

Happy cubing...
--Jordan
Wait I'm faster than that Welcome! I also use roux.
 

SH03L4C3

Member
Joined
Dec 16, 2020
Messages
1,469
Location
The orange centerpiece from your main 3x3
Hi everyone, I'm really new to cubing, but I'm a fast learner. After a few weeks working on Roux I made a time of 2:58 today, on my non-magnetic cube, which for me seems great, but I know it's incredibly slow by speed cubing standards. I have hopes to improve a lot from this point. I really like Roux because of the ergonomic feel. When I was a kid in the '80s (I'm old), I memorized the old-fashioned solution but it was nowhere near as easy and quick as the solutions these days.

Anyway thanks for having me and looking forward to learn more! For now I've been really focused on solid finger-trick technique, doing movements slowly to build muscle memory. I spend a lot of time just building pairs and blocks so I'll be able to see those patterns more quickly during F2B. And also working on tracking for FB, which is quite hard for me, for some reason.

My brother bought me a Gan which is coming next week, so I can compete online but I doubt anyone would match up at my slow level.

By the way, any suggestions on a good "beater" cube for travel... I've been comparing various MoYu and QiYi models, haven't decided if I want magnetic or not. It seems like a good idea to master without magnets first, which is what I've been doing. But maybe a light magnet feel... I was looking at the MoYu Weilong GTS3 LM (light magnetic), has anyone tried that one?

Another crazy idea I have is to get a miniature keychain-size speed-cube (probably MoYu) and put little dots, lines, circles etc. on each face using drops of glue. This way, I could maybe learn to solve it without looking, for example in the dark or when looking out the window of the bus...

One other thing, I wish there were a back-lit cube but I can't seem to find one anywhere. Apparently people have manually modified them to put LEDs inside. It seems like there would be a market for a fully backlit speedcube.

Anyway I'm excited to join this community and I have tons of respect for the discipline and effort that goes into cubing. I don't know if I will ever get below 1 minute, but hopefully so, given enough time.

Happy cubing...
--Jordan
Welcome!
You definetly cannot go wrong with a MoYu Meilong M
 

tsmosher

Member
Joined
Aug 30, 2020
Messages
1,055
I would second the recommendation to go magnetic. The feel, ergonomics, and fingertricks are just different on a magnetic cube. They feel much better IMHO. (Wide d and u moves would be tough without them.)

For a "beater" cube, Id recommend any cheap magnetic MoYu or Qiyi. Theyre all pretty nice once you adjust them.

And while I was just a baby in the 80s, I'm still old by speed cubing standards. Get a good cube, keep practicing, and you'll be under 1 minute before you know it.
 

Dan the Beginner

Premium Member
Joined
Jun 4, 2021
Messages
648
Location
Australia
Welcome, Jordan. I am very old and I only started 6 months ago. I also try to solve with Roux. Block building takes so much time for me and I am a slower turner. However, I managed to get occasional solves just under 1 minute.

Roux is much more enjoyable IMO. It is more intuitive and I feel like I am actually solving the puzzle using my brains, and not leaving it to hundreds of algorithms learnt and perfected so that the fingers just solve the puzzle near automatically, which I can't do and I do not enjoy learning so many algorithms anyway. roux is what I have selected after trying 4LLL (CFOP). Not having to rotate the cube and knowing which side of the cube is where are also very nice, for someone slow like me!

I think you should look at the Tornado V2, as it's magnet strength can be adjusted in 5 steps. It is also a very nice, smooth, quiet cube with exceptionally nice feel. And it is great for the M moves. Have a look at my review here. One advice, if I may, is that we need to consider our requirements and not those of the top cubers.
 
Last edited:

CubeRed

Member
Joined
Aug 10, 2021
Messages
839
Location
!̵̪́!̸̨́Ẽ̸̼Ȑ̵̩ř̸͈o̶̰͒R̴̜͠
One advice, if I may, is that we need to consider our requirements and not those off the top cubers.
STRONG agreement to this. I remember getting overwhelmed when I first started off cubing and all these people getting sub 8 times with methods I don't even know of. Don't compare with others. Go at your own pace.
 

Wondercito

Member
Joined
Oct 6, 2021
Messages
2
Location
USA
Hi Dan, I love this reply! Sounds like we have some things in common. I'm inspired to hear that you broke the 1-minute mark ... Good luck and have fun! 👍
 

AlgoCuber

Member
Joined
Mar 12, 2021
Messages
267
Roux is much more enjoyable IMO. It is more intuitive and I feel like I am actually solving the puzzle using my brains, and not leaving it to hundreds of algorithms learnt and perfected so that the fingers just solve the puzzle near automatically, which I can't do and I do not enjoy learning so many algorithms anyway. roux is what I have selected after trying 4LLL (CFOP). Not having to rotate the cube and knowing which side of the cube is where are also very nice, for someone slow like me!
To add to this, you should also try ZZ. Like Dan, CFOP was getting boring for me. Planning EOcross during inspection is hard for me and I can only do it half the time. F2L just feels nicer and smoother using EOcross (whether it's better is under debate) and having so many variations just makes it a more fun method to explore.

A common misconception is that ZZ has many more algorithms than CFOP, commonly using ZBLL as an example. However, this is totally wrong as EO is already solved for you. In fact, ZZ has fewer algorithms. In CFOP, you have to do something like OLL to orient the last layer (57 algs) but in ZZ you only have to use OCLL (7 algs).

Whatever method you choose, good luck!
 

cubing 4 ever

Member
Joined
Feb 2, 2021
Messages
6
Hi everyone, I'm really new to cubing, but I'm a fast learner. After a few weeks working on Roux I made a time of 2:58 today, on my non-magnetic cube, which for me seems great, but I know it's incredibly slow by speed cubing standards. I have hopes to improve a lot from this point. I really like Roux because of the ergonomic feel. When I was a kid in the '80s (I'm old), I memorized the old-fashioned solution but it was nowhere near as easy and quick as the solutions these days.

Anyway thanks for having me and looking forward to learn more! For now I've been really focused on solid finger-trick technique, doing movements slowly to build muscle memory. I spend a lot of time just building pairs and blocks so I'll be able to see those patterns more quickly during F2B. And also working on tracking for FB, which is quite hard for me, for some reason.

My brother bought me a Gan which is coming next week, so I can compete online but I doubt anyone would match up at my slow level.

By the way, any suggestions on a good "beater" cube for travel... I've been comparing various MoYu and QiYi models, haven't decided if I want magnetic or not. It seems like a good idea to master without magnets first, which is what I've been doing. But maybe a light magnet feel... I was looking at the MoYu Weilong GTS3 LM (light magnetic), has anyone tried that one?

Another crazy idea I have is to get a miniature keychain-size speed-cube (probably MoYu) and put little dots, lines, circles etc. on each face using drops of glue. This way, I could maybe learn to solve it without looking, for example in the dark or when looking out the window of the bus...

One other thing, I wish there were a back-lit cube but I can't seem to find one anywhere. Apparently people have manually modified them to put LEDs inside. It seems like there would be a market for a fully backlit speedcube.

Anyway I'm excited to join this community and I have tons of respect for the discipline and effort that goes into cubing. I don't know if I will ever get below 1 minute, but hopefully so, given enough time.

Happy cubing...
--Jordan
I have been cubing for 5 years and to be honest, a nonmagnetic cube is better for beginers but as you grow on, I use a gan 356 m
 

AlgoCuber

Member
Joined
Mar 12, 2021
Messages
267
I have been cubing for 5 years and to be honest, a nonmagnetic cube is better for beginers but as you grow on, I use a gan 356 m
I remember this... Didn't you claim to have solved the pyraminx in 0.234 seconds? I don't think that you can even pick up a cube, do a turn, and stop the timer in that time xD.

anyway, there's really no reason IMO to start off with a non-magnetic cube.
 
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