Difference between revisions of "Activities/Pukllanapac"
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[[File:Pukllanapac-icon.png]] | [[File:Pukllanapac-icon.png]] | ||
− | Pukllanapac is a sliding-puzzle game; the objective is to rearrange tiles so that all of the circles (and semicircles) are composed of sectors of the same color. | + | Pukllanapac is a sliding-puzzle game; the objective is to rearrange tiles so that all of the circles (and semicircles) are composed of sectors of the same color. There are three different patterns: circles, triangles, and hexagons. Drag tiles to swap their positions; click on tiles to rotate them. |
− | + | The circle puzzle has three levels of play: | |
* beginner, which is a 2×2 arrangement of tiles; | * beginner, which is a 2×2 arrangement of tiles; | ||
* intermediate, which is a 4×2 arrangement of tiles; and | * intermediate, which is a 4×2 arrangement of tiles; and |
Revision as of 21:11, 9 September 2010
Where to get Pukllanapac
About Pukllanapac
Pukllanapac is a sliding-puzzle game; the objective is to rearrange tiles so that all of the circles (and semicircles) are composed of sectors of the same color. There are three different patterns: circles, triangles, and hexagons. Drag tiles to swap their positions; click on tiles to rotate them.
The circle puzzle has three levels of play:
- beginner, which is a 2×2 arrangement of tiles;
- intermediate, which is a 4×2 arrangement of tiles; and
- expert, which is a 6×4 arrangement of tiles.
Warning: the first two levels are relatively easy, but the final level is challenging.
Pukllanapac is an Incan (Quechua) word for 'picture'. Oscar Becerra was the inspiration behind the activity.