The 12 Days of Puzzlemas has begun!

December 19, 2019 at 8:16 AM

Ho ho ho! Merry Puzzlemas!

The 12 Days of Puzzlemas has now begun! It’s a series of 12 daily puzzles with a metapuzzle to tie everything together.

The puzzles, hints and solutions can all be found here: https://danielpeake.com/blog1/puzzlemas/

If you need a snappier link to remember, there’s also tinyurl.com/puzzlemas

Happy solving!

Peake’s Puzzles #7 now available!

August 16, 2019 at 10:02 AM

Hi all – Peake’s Puzzles Issue 7 is now available! This issue features a cryptic crossword with a twist, and a puzzle called ‘Mising Midles’.

The whole issue solves down to a one word answer. What is that word? Head on over to bit.ly/peakespuzzles to find out!

If you have any feedback on the puzzles, please do let me know at puzzles@danielpeake.com and please do donate on my ko-fi page, ko-fi.com/danielpeake to support my work. These magazines don’t write themselves (sadly!)…

 

Peake’s Puzzle Page #1 Launched!

April 4, 2019 at 9:08 PM

Great news! The first edition of the Puzzle Page I’ve been developing this year is now available! The PDF is directly by CLICKING HERE – and is also hosted under the ‘PUZZLE PAGE‘ part of this website. If you bookmark bit.ly/peakespuzzles, you’ll be able to get all future issues there!

The Puzzle Page will become fortnightly in the near future, it will be a month until issue 2 as I’m still getting up to speed in terms of compiling these puzzles.

Puzzlevent – two weeks in

December 14, 2018 at 10:51 PM

We are now two weeks into Puzzlevent, my Puzzle Advent Calendar for 2018, and it’s going great. I’d estimate at least 100 regular solvers, based on the statistics I can see, and people do seem to be enjoying themselves. Day 3’s puzzle has been the hardest so far, there is one puzzle coming up that is equally difficult, or marginally harder, in my opinion. Good luck, peeps! Thank you for all the kind feedback, and I am really enjoying watching you solve.

All the puzzles can be found at bit.ly/puzzlevent , and hints appear 3 days after each puzzle is initially published – so you should be able to have a good crack at the first 10 or so and do well at them, hopefully!

If you are enjoying Puzzlevent, then please.consider making a donation to ko-fi.com/danielpeake , it will be hugely appreciated.

 

Puzzlevent is here!

December 2, 2018 at 2:34 PM

They say it’s the most wonderful time of the year: Advent, the period leading up to Christmas. This year, I have something very special to share with you all, it’s a Puzzle Advent Calendar, ‘Puzzlevent’!

Each day I will be publishing a new puzzle on twitter (@danielpeake) and on this website (bit.ly/puzzlevent) for you to solve. Some will be reasonably straight forward, some will be difficult, all will be unique puzzles that you won’t have seen before. You should definitely follow me on twitter though, as I will be posting lots of #puzzlevent related goodness there.

So, what are you waiting for? Head on over to bit.ly/puzzlevent, or click on PUZZLEVENT at the top of this page, to find more details and start solving!

Who Wants To Be A Statistician?

May 15, 2018 at 10:34 PM

Recently, Who Wants To Be A Millionaire came back for a new 7 episode run on UK TVs with Jeremy Clarkson as host. There are many good points and many bad points – the bad being the terrible graphics choices for the money ladder and lack of “playing for” or “just won” money graphics. The good points – Jeremy breathes a bit of life into the format (though if you don’t like him then you won’t like this series), Ask The Host is on the whole quite fun, the pacing was a bit better than the old series and it’s great to see the old money ladder back again.

But what interested me was analysing how the contestants did, and whether they’d make the series so ridiculously difficult no-one would get past £16,000, and to see what people did with the new movable milestone. So I dusted off my spreadsheet and made a few observations.

Thankfully, people did win big. 16 contestants played and £318k was given out over the series, including a £125k winner and £64k winner. Of the 16 contestants, 5 chose to walk away with money. 10 got their question wrong (including someone playing for £2000, so technically they didn’t lose anything), and 1 person got their question wrong but immediately after reaching their second milestone. This seems to be quite a high guess/gamble rate, people seem to be less cautious than the original series. One theory about why this could be is that of late, quiz shows have usually had a fast pace. For shows like The Chase in particular, if you don’t like the current question, a new one will be along soon. This fast-paced mentality might be leading people to go “I don’t know, but I suspect it’s answer B” and then locking it in.

The second moveable milestone is quite interesting. It used to be set at £32,000. Of the 16 contestants this series, 7 failed to set the milestone (they were too optimistic about their question answering changes), and the other 9 did the following: 4x£16k, 2x£32k, 2x£64k, 1x£125k. If you take an average of which question number it gets set on, it lands bang on question 10, for £32k! Having seen it play out, I quite like the movable milestone. It allows more cautious people to play the game and win more – they set the milestone slightly earlier and then essentially can get a free shot at £32k. It also allows the gambler to take on the game (quite often unsuccessfully, based on the number of people who didn’t set a milestone) – but setting a milestone at £125k then entices you towards actually going for the question, even if you’re unsure of the answer.

Of the 9 people who did set the moveable milestone, 4 reach the milestone safely, and 5 don’t (walk away or get question wrong). I’m not sure what this is saying, but I find it interesting that the second milestone is reached about half the time.

EDIT, and thanks to Matt Clemson for provoking this insight: Matt suggested that most contestants had the philosophy of not setting their second milestone until they’ve started to experience difficulty and have used some of their lifelines up already, leaving them with less ammunition to get to the second milestone.

Of the five people who didn’t make their milestone, when they set the milestone they had 0, 0, 1, 1 and 2 lifelines remaining, averaging 0.8 lifelines. Of the four people who did make their milestone, they had 2, 2, 2 and 3, averaging 2.25 lifelines. Those successful in reaching their milestone have many more lifelines to enable them to get there. So, I agree with Matt – you have to use your second milestone BEFORE you start to get into trouble. Maybe this information will help contestants in any future series!

The other lifelines are also quite interesting. The average questions on which the lifelines are used are as follows:
Ask The Audience – Q6.2 (used 14 out of 16 times)
Ask The Host – Q7.7 (used 13 out of 16 times)
50:50 – Q8.1 (used 14 out of 16 times)
Phone A Friend – Q9.6 (used 10 out of 16 times)

There’s a few interesting things in here. Ask The Host was used over a wide range of difficulties, from £300 to £64,000, and Jeremy did struggle quite a bit (ok, on most of them).

Ask The Audience is used on average 1.5 questions before Ask The Host. I completely disagree with this tactic. Between asking the host or the audience, you should always Ask The Host first. With Ask The Host, you’re asking 1 person with unknown general knowledge the question. With Ask The Audience, you’re asking 100ish people with unknown general knowledge the question. Due to the wisdom of crowds, the audience is more likely to know the answer to a harder question than the host – so you should Ask The Host BEFORE you Ask The Audience.

This argument breaks down a little for the Phone A Friend lifeline, because even though they are just one person, hopefully you have better sense of the strengths and weaknesses of their general knowledge. As such, they probably should be used around or later than the Ask The Audience Lifeline – and fewer people did ended using the Phone A Friend lifeline because they wanted to save it for a harder question instead (and got knocked out).

I agree with 50:50 being the middle lifeline used, you need to use it on a question where you have an inkling (medium level question) rather than absolutely no idea (harder level question), so it’s a good idea to use it roughly in the middle.

So there we have it – my summary is: People use Ask The Audience too soon – use Ask The Host instead, people seem to be gambling more, and the new movable milestone caters for both the conservative and risk taking players.

I thought Millionaire got off to an EXTREMELY ropy start on the Saturday evening, mainly in terms of ridiculously hard question difficulty settings, but they returned to approximately normal by Sunday/Monday and the rest of the week was a joy to watch. I found Jeremy a bit disrespectful at times – and got a question reveal wrong in a hilarious yet gut wrenching fashion – but he made the show entertaining and funny on a non-quiz level, which made Millionaire fun to watch. If it ever drops its pace below what we saw this week though, it’ll die right off. People can just google the answer at home and be uninterested.

I hope it comes back for another set of specials – though I’d limit it to maybe a 4 or 5 day run so people don’t get tired of it too quickly, as happened to the Millionaire of old – and only take place once or twice a year. In that fashion, long may it continue… just please change the god-awful fonts first.

Happy New 2018!

February 10, 2018 at 5:44 PM

Hey all! It’s 2018! I guess that’s not a surprise given last year was 2017 and these things tend to increment by one, but still…

I’m still here, I’m still plodding along, still struggling at times and I’ll update you all about that at some point in the future. But I’m still here, and I have things planned for 2018.

Last year, CodeBreaker was a great personal success (go, watch it, click on that link!), and this year I’m planning a different video quiz. It will (most likely) be called Dan’s Quiz.

I’ve done lots of quiz hosting in person over the past few months – mostly in The Horn in Reading but I’ve done a few other gigs including one for charity that was ridiculously fun. if you are interested in my hosting a quiz of yours, email quiz@danielpeake.com and get in touch.

I think that’s it for now, I will update you all soon with Dan’s Quiz news when I have it. I tend to tweet more than I blog, I’m on twitter as @danielpeake https://twitter.com/danielpeake. Go and follow me there to see my terrible jokes.

 

Crossword #7 by Everest

August 18, 2017 at 4:25 PM

It’s a mere 10 months since I last wrote a crossword for you lovely lot. Sorry about that. It’s been on my to do list since December, honest, I just got carried away with things like sleeping. I like sleeping.

Anyway, enjoy the latest puzzle, I promise the next one won’t be 10 months away. Possibly longer, possibly shorter, but not 10 months away.

Crossword #7 by Everest PDF

Solution is here: Crossword #7 Solution

Codebreaker!

May 5, 2017 at 10:03 AM

I’ve had a bit of time on my hands recently, and so I’ve been putting some of it good use by making a quiz for YouTube!

It’s called Codebreaker – two contestants are racing to crack a four digit code. Every time they get a general knowledge question right, they get to find out a bit of information about the code and have a guess at it. The winner goes through to play an against-the-clock end game that is just a little bit frantic.

I’m very pleased with how the series has settled, the first couple of episodes aren’t as good as my hosting is a little… dry, in my opinion. But the later episodes are great fun, and there are brilliant (i.e. absolutely terrible) puns in the questions and answers.

Do take a look at the series – like and subscribe it on YouTube as all the cool kids say: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8piHCzTNLV5VLrKF4g8PkA

Crossword #6 by Everest

October 21, 2016 at 3:24 PM

Hooray! Another crossword by me, Everest. Enjoy!

Crossword #6 by Everest PDF

Crossword # by Everest SOLUTION PDF