Well, Sup Forums?
Well, Sup Forums?
A) cup of tea
A
A) a cup of tea
its so simple even a caveman could do it
These are usually much harder than this.
Bravo, but that was an easy one, wasn't it? Let's warm up a little bit further, shall we?
one apple in each basket, stack the baskets small into large Russian doll style, put remaining apples in large basket
small basket goes into big basket
small 1
medium 2
large 2
this was some fucking bull shit man, how where you supposed to guess taht?
Quite well done!
Let us be moving on. Think you'll be able to solve this one?
Tea because why would you be THAT guy and order something different when everybody is asking for tea? You think you are special? You think you're better than me you orange juice gargling piece of shit? I fucking loathe you, I will fucking piss orange juice in your fucking grave after I'm done pouring boiled tea on your eye sockets.
Fuck.
I don't know that it's right, but it looks doable and Layton encourages geniethought
A? I'm not sure if I understand the question, but if it means it wants 5 pumps then the answer is A.
A is worth 2 points
B is worth 1 point
C is worth 4 points
All tables equal 8 points, last table has 6 points already, therefore they need a single cup of tea
Answer is A
pump a
50 / 150
25 / 150
15 / 150
10 / 150
100 / 150 -- need A
>Pump A fills 1/3 per day
>Pump B fills 1/6
>Pump C fills 1/10
>Pump D fills 1/15
>1/3 + 1/6 + 1/10 + 1/15 = 2/3
You need another A pump.
A, A fills 1/3 of the resevoir a day, B fills 1/6, C fills 1/10, and D fills 1/15. That leaves the resevoir filled 2/3 after one day, so A brings it full.
Astute! Fractions do make a life much easier, don't they?
Moving on. Let's see how well you'll perform on this one.
One, either of the buns with 3, cat or flower.
1, either of the ones that there are 3 of. One is a Jam Bun, he other is a Butter bun. 4 buns are cream, 2 byns are Chocolate.
this for sure. Just one of the triplets would do
One
A, because the flow rate of B+C+D = A if you work the equations out. Which means your current set of four does 2A, which means it'll take you two days. If you get one more A, you'll have 3A, which is one day.
2A is 1.5 days though.
Excellent! You figured that one quite fast, didn't you?
Here's another brain teaser for you.
>2nd paragraph and pictures tells us the different that there are 4 cream buns, 3 jam buns, 3 butter buns and 2 chocolate buns.
You know which ones are the cream buns and chocolate buns, so you only need to taste one cat or flower shaped bun to deduce the flavor of all shapes.
Eight
1? only the last lightbulb he replaces?
6 have gone out
4 remaining that haven't gone out.
4 have been repaired
8 final answer
No, oh no! You are missing one crucial detail!
Allow me to indulge you with a minor hint:
Think well on the state of light bulbs after the mentioned time span of 12 hours.
>After 12 hours, 6 out of 10 light bulbs will break.
>After 10 hours (cuz takes 2 ours for first bulb to break, duh), repairpair man will have time to repair 3 bulbs.
So, 7 bulbs will still be lit after 12 hours.
Layton is like an exercise in how to write a confusing word problem. I thought it was one for sure till I saw the other answers and realized the answer was actually 8.
Steven
Just taking a moment to tell OP that this is a great thread. Keep it up man!
Don't worry guys, I got ALL of this.
None, it would be daytime
Yes?
>loved the first 3 layton games
>can't get into the 4th
Dunno what it is
Layton, you fucker. He might live in the arctic circle in winter. none cuz daytime
Fuck this game if it's the answer.
LAYYYTOONNNNNNN
0 because it's fucking day.
Fuck you hershel.
0 as thats cheap tho
This. I remember this puzzle as well.
Fuck Layton.
Very observant of you! Indeed, not a single one of light bulbs will be active during daylight.
Therein lied the solution!
You've earned another. Try and think this one thoroughly.
It's so obvious after you've played enough of these games
4. On phone. Can't be bothered to type out the events of this poor electricians evening.
From which layton are these? I don't recognize any of them.
Brainlet here, why was it tea instead of juice?
I figured since based on the other orders at each table, juice was the cheapest item on the menu, with toast being the most expensive. So how is it that 4 cups of tea are equal in value to two glasses of juice, toast, and a cup of tea?
two
5
Think of Juice as 1, Tea as 2, and Toast as 4. Every table adds up to 8.
1
juice = 0.5
toast = 2
tea = 1
every table is 4
2
1
2
2
2
2.
1 is E, 3 is B, 4 is D, and 5 is A.
There is already a table with 3 cups and 2 juice, adding juice would make this table 3 cups and 1 juice which is less.
>Very observant of you! Indeed, not a single one of light bulbs will be active during daylight.
>Therein lied the solution!
GUESS WHAT FUCKER
YOU DIDN'T SAY WHERE AND SOME PLACES GET 24/7 NIGHTTIME FOR MONTHS OF THE YEAR
>Try and think this one thoroughly.
Wife A sits in seat 5. Wife B isn't sitting in 4 or 5 and so is on the other side of the table, and Wife A isn't sitting in 4.
Wife C cannot be sitting in 4. If that were the case, then D/E would be in 3/1 respectively, but Wife B won't sit opposite her husband in 2. Wife D can't sit in 4, since it would be opposite her husband. So Wife E is in 4.
Wife D needs to sit in 3.
Wife B can only sit in 1.
So Wife C is sitting in seat 2.
1 and 2 are correct choices.
it can't be 1
Very good indeed. Quite an unusual seating order, one could argue.
I am hopeful that this one will prove a mere triviality for your mental faculties.
A5
D3
B1
E4
C2
5 minutes
5
5 cats
6 friends
6
3x+6=5x-6
x=6
6
None, the girl is diabetic and having given out all her chocolates suffers from low blood sugar levels and has to be rushed to hospital canceling the party
6 people.
(6x3=18)+ 6 leftover =24
(6x5=30)-6 short=24
The left two tables have the following:
>#1: 2 juice, 1 tea, 1 toast
>#3: 2 juice, 3 tea
Since both orders have to be equal, this means that 2 tea = 1 toast. The rest of the orders (2 juice, and 1 more tea) are identical.
The difference between table #2 and table #3:
>#2: 2 tea, 1 toast
>#3: 3 tea, 2 juice
There are two tea similar, so the difference is 1 tea + 2 juice = 1 toast.
We've already established that 2 tea = 1 toast, and now 1 tea + 2 juice = 1 toast, so that means 2 tea = 1 tea + 2 juice. Or, 1 tea = 2 juice.
So we have:
>2 juice = 1 tea
>2 tea = 1 toast
>4 juice = 1 toast (just to clarify)
All tables have the equivalent of 4 tea, equivalent of 8 juice, or equivalent of 2 toast. (The 4 tea is easiest to do with substitution.) For the last table, it already has 3 tea on it, so it just needs one more tea to be even with the rest.
These problems always make me feel stupid, I can't ever set them up right
Really? I didn't even math it. Just did 12 chocolates given and she gave 2 extras to each of her friends. Just 12 / 2 = 6
6 people total, so if we include the girl as 1 of the 6, then she has 5 friends coming over
Very humorous, yet nonetheless tragic.
Again, bravo! This did remind me of another problem involving a certain girl..
Think you'll be able of giving her a hand?
Every single puzzle I don't feel motivated doing the math in the case it's some red herring bullshit answer again.
63
I've never even understood how "word problems" in math could be challenging to anyone.
Like, it's just restating what's been said.
Good thing I'm not a math teacher I guess.
63
watch me be wrong after being a cocky shit.
1 left
3 1 person
7 2 person
15 3 person
31 4 person
63 5 persns
63
63
How could she even hold 63 flowers.
...
come one dude, it's two variables, setting up a system of two equations.
What sort of pansy are you?
There we go! Another solution unraveled, and another problem solved.
This is hardly the end however. Let's give your mind some respite with another trivial one.
It's algebra. If you weren't taught how to do it well, then you're going to have trouble with it.
Missy here is giving out chocolate to her friends. If she gives out three chocolates to each one, she'll have six chocolates left over. So that means she has six chocolates, plus three for each friend. 6 + 3 x friends, to put it in math terms.
If she tries to give out five chocolates, she will be short six chocolates. In other words, she has six less chocolates than she needs. (Think of it like needing to borrow six to give five to each friend.) To put that in a maths way, it would be 5 x friends - 6. (Five for each friend, and the six "debt" she needs to borrow to make that work.)
Since both of these account for all the chocolates, then they are the same number of chocolates and you can make them equal to one another. 6 + 3 x friends = 5 x friends - 6.
However, there is a bit of a trick if you don't want to do math. Handing out THREE chocolates to each friend left you with six too many. Handing out FIVE chocolates to each friend left you with six too few. Using that logic, you can determine that handing out FOUR would be just right, since three-per is six less and five-per is six more. And it then makes sense that she has six friends, since there are six left over or six needed otherwise.
8
8
8
8 Since you need to remove 7 to get at it?
8?
8
8 but I don't really know why.
8?