More than forty years ago, the modest Hungarian architecture teacher Ernő Rubik created a puzzle that was supposed to help students understand mathematical group theory. He had no idea that his \"magic cube\" would become one of the best-selling toys in human history and spawn a whole subculture of speedcubers. But behind this success are many amusing, curious, and even absurd stories — about both the inventor himself and the millions of people who have tried (and are still trying) to conquer the colorful cube.
Perhaps the most ironic story is connected with Ernő Rubik himself. In 1974, he created his \"Magic Cube\" (the original name of the puzzle), shuffled the colors, and… could not put it together. The creator spent more than a month trying to restore order to the faces and only found the solution after weeks. \"I created a code that I couldn't read,\" he confessed later. In a way, everyone who has ever held the cube has shared its fate. It's funny that the man who gave the world this puzzle himself became its first \"hostage\".
One of the most typical curiosities happened to a 12-year-old Indian boy named Shashank Naik. He received the Rubik's Cube as a birthday gift and, not knowing the algorithms, simply made four twists and then returned them. But one day his friend shuffled the cube completely and, on top of that, the central stickers fell off. Shashank tried to learn from video tutorials but failed. In despair, he kicked the cube, threw it against the walls, and even thought about blowing it up. When his patience ran out, he simply took the puzzle apart and put it back together — and then he realized: \"I could have done this much earlier!\" He told his sister that he had solved the problem and called himself the dumbest person in the world. And his sister replied that the girl he turned to for help had long forgotten about it. \"I was completely bewildered,\" Shashank summed up.
Another young cuber, Lance Ventula, described a surreal story. One day, the boy received a Rubik's Cube, couldn't put it together, but was happy just to have it. He even slept with the cube. And he dreamed that speedcubers were laughing so loudly over one of the arrangements that one of them gave him advice: \"If you see a shuffled cube — laugh as loudly as you can. The bigger the cube, the louder you laugh.\" When he woke up, he found that his cube was assembled. And on his birthday, he was given a cake with a shuffled cube on it — and he laughed so loudly that his ears were blocked. The moral of this story: \"Don't let the main character see a shuffled Rubik's Cube, especially a big one.\"
The Rubik's Cube has long become more than just a toy, a cultural phenomenon that has spawned many anecdotes and jokes. One of the most popular metaphors: \"My life is like a Rubik's Cube. On one side — blue, and on the other side — it doesn't fit.\" Or: \"I've fixed one side, it's better not to look at the other — there's a mess.\"
Military humor also did not bypass the puzzle. They joke that for private and sergeant's rank, they released an ordinary cube, for junior and middle officers — a monochrome one, and for senior officers — a monolithic one. And for warrant officers — a cube that doesn't rotate.
There are also absurd stories: for example, about how a champion in solving the Rubik's Cube was left alone at the New Year's table and \"assembled\" half a loaf of sausage and other ingredients in ten minutes. Or about a man who solved the cube in 10 seconds but was not recorded in the Guinness Book of Records due to the diagnosis \"color blindness\".
Speed solving of the Rubik's Cube has not only produced serious records but also completely absurd achievements. For example, the German blogger Tom Copke set a world record by solving the Rubik's Cube in 23.3 seconds during a parachute jump over the Mossel Bay in South Africa. Need it be said that he was falling in free fall at that moment?
There are also less extreme but no less amusing records: solving the cube with one hand, feet, with eyes tied, or even while riding a unicycle. And robots are already solving the cube in 103 milliseconds — faster than a person blinks.
The Rubik's Cube has become a favorite tool for pranks. On the internet, videos are going viral where a magician \"solves\" the puzzle in 1.26 seconds with one move. Of course, this is a trick — the cube was already assembled and just turned over. But the audience was confused. Another popular prank: a person offers a friend free beer for a quick assembly and then gives him a cube with an impossible arrangement and watches his confusion.
Moreover, there is an entire subculture of people who deliberately assemble cubes with \"wrong\" colors to prank perfectionists. And if you disassemble the cube and assemble it randomly, the probability that it can be assembled is only 1/12. So many failures are not a lack of skills but simply a bad assembly.
A humorous story about a Rubik's Cube solving tournament in the Baltic States is also worthy of mention. It started in 1984. The winner solved it then and there in 37 seconds, and the last participant finished… after 21 years, 76 days, 3 hours, and 18 seconds. The organizers suspect that he simply repainted the edges and if this is confirmed, he will have to start all over again.
The Rubik's Cube is much more than just a puzzle. It is a mirror of our perseverance, our foolishness, our tenacity, and our ability to laugh at ourselves. From the inventor who couldn't put his own invention together, to the boy who kicked the cube with his foot, and to the blogger who assembles it in free fall — every story reminds us that even the most serious task can become a reason for a smile. In the end, as one of the anecdotes says: \"The Rubik's Cube is the only thing that annoys and fascinates at the same time.\" And it seems that this will continue for many years to come.
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