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Welcome to the SpeedSolving.com Wiki!

Learn about speedsolving the Rubik's Cube and other twisty puzzles on this wiki. Built to compliment our community of 35,000+ solvers, this wiki has tutorials, methods, records, and articles on puzzle solving. The 1,508 articles contain information on getting faster as well as on various aspects of speedcubing and the Speedsolving.com community.

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Most viewed articles

PLL
PLL
OLL
OLL
F2L
F2L

CFOP
CFOP
Roux
Roux
ZZ
CFOP
Petrus
Petrus

UWR
Unofficial World Records
Lubrication
Cube lube vintage ad
Introduction to Speedcubing
Speedsolving a standard 3x3x3
4x4x4 Parity Algorithms
4x4x4 Double parity


Today's featured article

Chris Tran's Alinea Project seminar at CubingUSA Nationals 2017

Today's featured article is Alinea Project.

Alinea Project was an independent project started by Chris Tran developed with the goal of drastically improving 3x3x3 cubing hardware. The project was publicly revealed at CubingUSA Nationals 2017 about five minutes into Tran's seminar titled "One Small Step for Magnets-- One Giant Leap for Cubing".

The project included putting tensions in the core of the cube, greatly enlarging the feet and torpedos, using an easy-to-manufacture and stable method of embedding magnets into the pieces, and using self-lubricating internal plastic.

The project has been halted due to high costs, adding up to US$3,396.34 for the cost of prototypes and testing.


How to Contribute

Requested articles
Requested articles
Policies and guidelines
Policies and guidelines
Administer
Administration
General discussion
General discussion
Sandbox
Sandbox
Manual of Style
Manual of Style



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Today's featured picture

This is the inside of a Dayan GuHong Version 1


Did you know

The WCA logo
The World Cube Association (abbreviated as WCA) is the official organization for cubing competitions and records.


FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
Cubing terminology
Terminology
Puzzle notations
Terminology
History of cubing
Terminology

The 3x3x3 cube (also known as "Rubik's cube" and "magic cube") was invented by Ernő Rubik in 1974, and was quickly unveiled in the early 1980s.

This is a mechanical and geometric puzzle composed of with 26 elements (called cubies), which can be moved with a system of axes, that is hidden in the center of the cube. Each of the six faces is covered by 9 stickers, among six solid colours (traditionally being white, yellow, orange, red, blue, and green). The system of axes enables each layer to turn independently, thus mixing up the colours. For the puzzle to be solved, each face must be a solid colour.

It is said to be the world's best-selling toy, with over 350 millions cubes sold worldwide as of 2009.

It has inspired many widely available variations such the 2×2×2, the 3×3×3, the 4×4×4, the 5×5×5, larger sizes ones, the Pyraminx (tetrahedron), the Skewb Diamond (octahedron), the Megaminx (dodecahedron) or the Dogic (icosahedron). All of these items belong to a broad category of puzzles commonly referred to as "twisty puzzles". Some twisty puzzles are shape-shifting (such as the Square One) or custom-built (such as shape modifications of existing mechanisms).

Many subjects have been built around cubing:

Speedcubing
Fewest Moves solving
Cubing competitions
The WCA logo
Blindfolded solving
Blindfolded solving
Feet solving
Feet solving
Fewest Moves
Fewest Moves solving
One-Hand solving
One-Hand solving
Optimal solution
The superflip pattern
Puzzle softwares
scrambled simulated 3x3x3x3
Puzzle solving
"beginner method" steps