Tutorial Contest Entry 3
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Contents
JUDGES' SCORES
See the forum-announcement post for a description of the judging categories.
The averaged scores of the judges for this entry were:
Clarity: 8.83
Comprehensiveness: 9.83
Contribution: 9.33
Illustrations: 9.50
Presentation: 8.83
Research: 8.50
The final score is a sum of these scores, with "internal" categories (clarity, comprehensiveness, illustrations, presentation) counting 2x as much as "external" categories (contribution, research). Maximum score is 100.
The final score for this tutorial is: 91.83
Introduction to Carpentry:
The carpentry puzzle is one of the 5 duty puzzles of Puzzle Pirates, which are the center of puzzle pirates. As a duty puzzle Caprentry is always free to play because it is integral part of pillaging which is the heart an soul of Puzzle Pirates.
Carpentry is often considered one of the least important of the duty puzzles because it does not have a direct effect on the operation of a ship. Carpentry instead effects how fast bilge enters the ship. A ship with it’s red carpentry meter nearly full means that bilge enters the ship at a rapid rate. If that rate exceeds the bilgers’ ability to pump it out the blue bilge meter will fill up and reduce the ships sailors ability to generate movement tokens during sea battle and increase the time required for a ship to build up speed when sailing across the ocean. Carpentry is also crucial during blockades to keep a ship afloat and contending for flags.
In any case skilled carpenters are needed to keep the ship performing at maximum efficiency. It is the carpenters job to repair the normal wear and tear on a ship that it accumulates as it maneuvers across the ocean, as well and quickly repairing damage taken by the ship during Sea Battle.
How to Play the Carpentry Puzzle
The ultimate goal of carpentry is to fill the carpentry puzzle holes as quickly and as efficiently as possible. A beginner at carpentry starts out with a single hole and three pieces that will perfectly fill that hole. When you have some basic skill and experience a carpenter will start out with 4 randomly sized holes to fill.
Toolbox and Performance Indicators
In the carpentry puzzle there are four primary components to understand. Each plays a roll in performing the puzzle or tracking your progress through the puzzle. (see figure 1)
- Holes – These are the main targets of the puzzle and are what generates the score for the puzzle. Using the available pieces in the toolbox the carpenter attempts to fill them as quickly and efficiently as possible. (See points A on figure 1)
- Toolbox – Located in the middle of the carpentry board this is the location of the pieces available for use in filling the holes of the puzzle. There will always be three pieces to use in the toolbox. Each time a piece is used another piece will appear in the toolbox to replace the piece just used. (See point B on figure 1)
- Hammer – Located to the right side of the carpentry board this is the indicator of the how well the puzzle is being performed. It ranges in color from black, to red, to orange, various shades of yellow and finally sparkling. How fast it is going up and down also indicates how well the puzzle is being performed. (See point C on figure 1)
- Star Meter – Located to the left side of the carpentry puzzle indicates the progress through number of holes before the puzzle is reset with four new empty holes. Each star on the indicator represents a set of 4 holes. (See point D on figure 1)
Pieces
The Carpentry puzzle is made up of ten different pieces. Each piece is made up of five blocks oriented together in a pattern so that each block is adjacent to at least one other block. There are nine combinations of five blocks with each piece covering one of the combinations. There is in addition one special piece that will fill any of the piece combination. This piece is the Putty Bucket. These ten pieces are your tools for working the carpentry puzzle and utilized in the correct combinations can make any standard hole a Masterpiece.
Frequencies
Each piece has a set frequency to how likely it is to appear in the toolbox. The most common piece is the P and the rarest piece is the Putty Bucket. The pieces can be broken into the following categories the number after the piece is the number occurrences the pieces will show up when 95 pieces have been selected. So the P pieces comes up roughly 22 times out of every 95 pieces.
- Common (P-22, F-14, Y-14) – These pieces are almost always guaranteed to come up if you are patient in waiting for them to get a masterpiece.
- Uncommon (L-8, N-8) – These two pieces are likely to come up if you are patiently waiting for them to complete a masterpiece.
- Unreliable (T-7, U-4, V-4, Z-4) – These pieces are at best unreliable in coming up when you need them. They do come up but you should be prepared to try and get a Grain Bonus if you need one of these pieces to complete a Masterpiece.
- Rare (X-3, I-2) – If this is the shape needed for the last piece for a master piece you are almost assured of having a booched hole.
- Very Rare (Bucket-1) – This piece can save you bacon on a hole that is in the position of being booched or having a piece fly off. Use them wisely and when you need them.
Flashing Holes and Shaking Pieces
In this puzzle all holes must be tended to. Holes ignored for to long begin to degrade. An empty hole that has been ignored with begin to flash. You will then have three turns to place a piece in that hole. If you do not place a piece there within that time you will here a cracking should and the puzzle will grow by one square and rendering it impossible to score a Masterpiece in that hole. The flashing become more rapid each time a piece is not placed in that hole. If a hole has at least one piece in it and is ignored for too long then the last piece placed in that hole begins to shimmy. Once it does you will have 2 turns in which to place a piece in that whole. If a piece isn’t placed within that time the shaking piece will fly out of the hole and will render the hole impossible to achieve a Masterpiece in.
Controls
Mouse Controls
- Left Button – Picks up and puts down pieces in the toolbox and the puzzle holes.
- Right Button – Flips the current selected piece horizontally.
- Mousewheel – Rotates the current piece so that it may be positioned in any direction
Keyboard Controls
- Space – Picks up and puts down pieces in the toolbox and the puzzle holes
- 1 – Selects the left most piece in the toolbox
- 2 – Selects the middle piece in the toolbox
- 3 - Selects the right most piece in the toolbox
- Q – Centers the selected piece over the top-left hole
- W – Centers the selected piece over the top-right hole
- A – Centers the selected piece over the bottom-left hole
- S – Centers the selected piece over the bottom-right hole
- X – Flips the current selected piece horizontally
- Z – Rotates the selected piece counterclockwise
- C – Rotates the selected piece clockwise
- Arrow Keys – Moves the selected piece around the selected hole
Scoring
Each hole may be filled perfectly with the available pieces. This is called a Masterpiece and is the base for scoring that particular hole. If you think of a hole having a base score of 4 then each piece used beyond the number needed for a masterpiece reduces the score by 1 down to 0 for each extra piece used.
- Masterpiece! – Hole filled with the minimum number of pieces possible.
- Craftsmanship! – Hole filled one piece more than the minimum possible.
- A Fair Job. – Hole filled two pieces more than the minimum possible.
- Sloppy Work. – Hole filled three pieces more than the minimum possible.
- A Pig’s Breakfast! – Hole filled four or more pieces more than the minimum possible.
Masterpiece Chain Bonus
Masterpieces can be chained for increasing bonuses. (Masterpiece!2, Masterpiece!3, . . ., Masterpiece!16) Each increase to the chain increases the bonus for that completed hole. The bonus counter is reset after 16 and after the Star Meter has filled and a new set of four holes are started.
Grain Bonus
Each piece as it comes into play has a grain on it just like a real piece of wood. The grain always runes left to right when a piece first appears in the toolbox. Pieces will appear in a random oriented direct with the exception of the four pieces the Y, L, N and I. These pieces will never appear with the grain going across the short side but will always run the length of the piece.
Because of the grain on the Y, L, N and I you should always place pieces so that the grain runs horizontally if possible. There are three special pieces that can always be used in with the grain horizontal. The V, X and W pieces are such that if flipped and rotated properly they can always be positioned with the grain horizontal no matter which direction they face when they first appear in the toolbox.
If you know a hole is going to be booched then try to get the grain bonus from it. This is especially easy with small holes requiring 4 to 5 pieces to fill normally. Next to the Masterpiece the Grain Bonus is almost as good.
Nice Set Bonus
Another possible bonus can be achieved by using all of the same shaped piece in one hole. This is generally easiest to do with the P and L shaped pieces in small 4x5 square holes but can be accomplished on larger holes and with other pieces. Like the Grain Bonus this aids in scoring but should not be done at the expense of a Masterpiece. Outside of the P and possibly the L pieces are generally not reliable enough to get enough of the same piece to fill a hole completely or in others are more difficult to attempt to use in this manner. If a hole is going to be booched any way you can try to use pieces to complete a hole for this bonus.
Basic Strategy
Squaring a Hole
When working a hole in carpentry it is best to work a hole from the outside and collapsing it in. The more square the hole is the easier it will be to complete for a Masterpiece. Cutting across a hole and creating bottlenecks will often result in a booched hole. This is because you will have less options on what pieces will hit in a hole to get a Masterpiece. This couple with the fact that the P piece is the most common piece to have makes square holes the easiest to fill.
The example in Figure 3 shows a hole that has been squared nicely. This particular hole should be fairly easy to complete as a masterpiece. It would also be very easy to reduce this hole to one of the 3 most common two-pieces holes that will be described later.
Working the Corner
It is generally best to focus on completing one or two holes at a time. When new holes show up gauge which one is the smallest of the four and concentrate on making a Masterpiece out of that one. Typically there will be one or two that will require 4, 5 or 6 pieces to complete. If the other holes are largish then these small holes will be the ones complete first anyway whether they are a Masterpiece or not. An example of this is point A in Figure 4. In this case the hole is small and square and will be easy to complete quickly.
Once you have identified the smallest then take note of which of the ones adjacent puzzles is the next smallest. This will be your secondary target. In the Figure 4 example this is likely to be point B. The other adjacent hole can also be a target but if it is largish then it becomes a great place for pieces that do not aid in completing the your targets. In the Figure 4 example this would be point C. It is also smallish so you should be prepared to switch the secondary focus if pieces come up that could be used to complete it quickly, Ys, Ns or Vs work well in this hole. The hole diagonal from the smallest hole should be the one you place the fewest pieces in unless for some reason it is also small. This is point D on Figure 4. Since it is also smallish you will want to delay placing pieces in this hole until the last moment. The goal is to complete the primary and the secondary targets. When this is accomplished you will be given two fresh holes. You continue this process until you complete the round and get a complete set of four new holes and you start up all over again. The off holes especially the diagonal one should be delayed as long as possible as long as you are keeping the primary holes squared off nicely.
Two-Piece Holes
This is probably the most critical strategy for stringing Masterpieces together and elevating your Carpentry score to Ultimate and beyond. Once you work a hole sufficiently and assuming you have kept it relatively square you will eventually come to the point where you will need two pieces to complete. You will be trying to work the hole so that the last two piece hole is one that a combination of common pieces will complete it. You should leave one of the following two-piece holes whenever possible.
Top-Notch: This hole is the easiest hole of this size to be filled and as such is superior tall all other two-piece holes. I can be filled by PY, PL, PT, PV, PZ, FU and YU. In each case one of the 3 most common pieces are required and in one of them 2 together.
The best combination utilizes the P piece and any one of 4 fairly common pieces. And in a pinch also by the U which match with two common pieces. If you have a choice in the shape of your 2 piece hole this is definitely the one to go with. The rate of a match in combination with the P occurs twice in every five pieces.
Dogleg: This piece is nearly as good as the Top-Notch being completed by PP, PL, PU, LN and VZ. As with all the best two-piece holes this one combos the P with three other pieces one of which is another P. The frequency of a piece coming up to combine with a P is roughly one in three.
In the case of this hole either the P, L or U are great pieces to wait on. LN isn’t bad but probably should try it unless you have both at the same time or you are in the position of needed P pieces for 3 or 4 holes at the same time. I do not recommend trying to complete this hole with the VZ as I is not reliable enough
Dome: This hole can be filled with PP, PL and PW. It is nearly identical to the Dogleg but slightly less useful as you have to have a P to complete it but since 90 % of the time you’ll be completing holes with the P anyway it doesn’t really matter much as typically a the Dogleg is not completed with the VZ combination and only occasionally with the LN combination. The frequencies of matches for the P is identical to the Dogleg at one in three.
It is also interesting to note that if you hold onto a P piece and wait for one of the other three to show up you’ll be surprised pleasantly that the W will come up giving you a nice use for it where it otherwise might have been the source of frustration.
Middle-Notch: This can be completed by PF, PN, PV and UX. Again the P piece is an the key piece that can be combined with 3 pieces that do sow up fairly frequently especially if you combine their frequencies. The rate would be between 1 of them in about every 3 or 4 pieces.
I have found that I rely on this hole just as much as I rely on the Top Notch and the dogleg. The F and N pieces are both common enough that if you are patient and wait on them you should get them without trouble and when you throw the V in to the mix it is a nice bonus way to complete. You should not rely on the UX at all as the X only comes up when you absolutely don’t want it but if you have them both at the same time then by all means you have a nice safe place to put the X.
Animal: This hole can be completed PP, FV and LU. Not the greatest two-piece hole in the world but you don’t usually go wrong with PP. Also if you already have a V or U in your tool box you also have the advantage of search for two other common pieces to use. Worth it to leave if you have ether the V or the U and have a large hole for odd pieces still while you search.
Make sure you are careful however when you leave this hole. Usually you should be able to leave the Dome rather than his hole which is much more reliable. Usually this can be accomplished by flipping the direction of a piece such as the Y or F.
Offset: This hole can be completed by PP, NN, UU and WW. It is not great but needing two Ps is never a bad thing and NN may come up as well.
If you are like me at all you will often have pieces come up in pairs or triplets. When have this hole it is often worth while to hold the N, U or W a turn or two if you can just to see if you’ll get a matching pair. Don’t wait it out too long if it would cause you to give up a P as that could spell disaster.
Lazy Animal: This hole can be completed PP, FY and YI. Again with PP this makes a great hole although FY is also worth waiting on. If you already have the I then you can wait on the Y for a little variety in all those Ps. Worth it to leave if you have ether the V or the U and have a large hole for odd pieces still while you search.
This hole is especially good if you have worked yourself into a position of needed a lot of P pieces because of having all 4 holes being equally small, you have had a drought of P pieces or you already have the FY combination. The FY combination add nice Masterpiece diversity if you already need P pieces especially if you are at the end of a round.
The Ship: This hole can be completed PP, FV and NT. PP should make completing this hole with easy although the other two combinations aren’t bad if you have the V or the T already. In either case you are likely to have the piece needed to complete it just don’t place the off piece too early to make sure you have the optimum time to complete if for a masterpiece.
The trick with this hole is not to be too impatient to place the rare pieces. They may be difficult to work around sometimes and you may feel you are limiting yourself too much but in the end I cannot say it enough that patience is the key to this puzzle. Rushing this hole is likely to have it end in a booch.
The Rectangle: This hole can be completed PP, LL and II. Again PP is the way to go but LL isn’t bad. Only do II if you have both pieces already even if you are waiting a turn or two to see if a pair will come up.
I should leave this hole if you already have need several P pieces. It is however a good hole in a pinch as the P is plenty frequent enough to provide both pieces to complete it. Again wait as long as possible to place a piece even the P when you have this hole come up and you should do fine.
Advanced Strategy
The Cold Toolbox
Starting up from scratch is one crucial place in carpentry. When you first start up Carpentry you’ll have a dead black hammer. The best way to get to that flying sparkling hammer is to complete to Masterpieces as fast as you can. To do this it is crucial to focus completely on two holes one each at a time. It takes two Masterpieces to get to the sparkling flying hammer. The faster you get them the better chance you have on getting a first league point Masterpiece. The more Masterpieces you can get in before the League Point improves your chances of getting that incredible but it is the first two that is the most critical. The quicker you can get to sparkling the better your score will be. With a little luck you will have a 4X5 hole and start out with Ps, Ys and Ls. If you have them use them on that small hole and ignore the other holes. After the first is done do the same to the second only going after the off holes only if you’ll cause the hole to be booch or you have no pieces that help you complete a master piece in the first hole. Getting Two Masterpieces quickly will guarantee you at least and excellent on the first duty report.
Ignoring Holes
I have read many tip guides that advanced carpenters recommend working all four holes at once. I’m not sure what they are referring to on this point. If they mean keeping all four in mind then I agree. If they mean working all four down at once then I think they are nuts. By keeping one if not two holes on the largish side you keep your options open. I am sure any pirates who has done much carping have gotten three or four Xs or Is in a row. If all your holes are small then you are pretty hosed on what to do with them. If you have a couple of big holes on the side, these pieces will be easier to use and keep your Masterpiece string alive. The most dangerous place to be in is to have all four holes within two to four pieces of being complete. If you don’t get the right pieces in the right order you could end up with four booched holes in a row.
In Figure 5 you can see that Hole A has been largely ignored. To this point the only activity performed on it is to keep it from booching and to use it as a home for pieces like the X. In it’s current state once focus switches to it, it will still be easy to complete as a Masterpiece because of the large about of space yet to fill in it.
Ending a Round
This can be one of the trickiest parts of the puzzle. How do you gracefully end and string masterpieces all the way out? This is the part of the puzzle where giving more focus to all the puzzles simultaneously come into play. You will need to be more creative with how you place pieces is more important. Too much reliance on the P can get you into trouble when working the last couple of holes. Squaring is still important but leaving good locations for Fs, Ys and Ns help more at this point. The best policy is to take a little extra time and place piece so that other piece that are already showing in your toolbox have a logical place to go next. At this point your options for pieces is much more limited and you have to work more on make your pieces fit together better since you want have a large hole to place rare pieces. At this point is wise to play the rare pieces immediately if there is a viable place to work around them. Keeping the grain bonus is also important to keep in mind. A Grain Bonus at this point will do wonders for you until you can get to four holes again.
Final Thoughts
The absolute best thing you can do for your Carpentry rating is be patient. Don’t be overly eager to place pieces. Wait till the last moment to improve your chances of getting the right piece to complete the hole and do it two or three pieces before the last piece is placed. Also don’t hesitate to leave a hole that needs just one more piece no matter what shape it is. It has never ceased to be amazed at how often the puzzle will give you the right piece even if it waits till the last move and the piece is a W or an I. Patience and planning are the key to Carpentry. When you have both down you’ll soon become the Ultimate Carpenter you’ll always dreamed of being.