1990s-2000s Volkswagen seven-seater / SUN 3-27-22 / Bellini opera that takes place in Gaul / High-arcing shots, in basketball lingo / One-act Oscar Wilde play / Most massive dwarf planet in the solar system / Harp-shaped constellation / New York town that's home to Playland amusement park

Sunday, March 27, 2022

Constructor: August Lee-Kovach

Relative difficulty: Easy, mostly


THEME: KHUFU — circled squares form a pyramid shape that spells out "THE GREAT PYRAMID OF GIZA"; then there's a lot of trivia related to that. Further, there is an isolated part of the grid within the "pyramid" (the KING'S CHAMBER) where we find KHUFU ... I have no idea who that is (see Word of the Day, below):

Theme answers:
  • SEVEN WONDERS / OF THE / ANCIENT WORLD (5D: With 51-Across and 15-Down, group in which [see circled letters] is the only one still largely intact)
  • LIMESTONE (41A: Approximately 5.5 million tons of it was used to build [see circled squares])
  • CHEOPS (10D: Greek name for this puzzle's enclosed answer)
  • KING'S CHAMBER (74D: With 101-Across, where this puzzle's enclosed answer is located)
  • THREE (79D: Number of 101-Acrosses in [see circled squares])
Word of the Day: KHUFU (121A in the grid pictured above) —

Khufu (/ˈkf/, full name Khnum Khufu /ˈknm ˈkf/, known to the ancient Greeks as ΧέοψKhéops, and the ancient Romans as CheopsOld Egyptianḫw.f-wjḪawyafwī pronounced [χawˈjafwij]) was an ancient Egyptian monarch who was the second pharaoh of the Fourth Dynasty, in the first half of the Old Kingdom period (26th century BC). Khufu succeeded his father Sneferu as king. He is generally accepted as having commissioned the Great Pyramid of Giza, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, but many other aspects of his reign are poorly documented.

The only completely preserved portrait of the king is a three-inch high ivory figurine found in a temple ruin of a later period at Abydos in 1903. All other reliefs and statues were found in fragments, and many buildings of Khufu are lost. Everything known about Khufu comes from inscriptions in his necropolis at Giza and later documents. For example, Khufu is the main character noted in the Westcar Papyrus from the 13th dynasty.

Most documents that mention king Khufu were written by ancient Egyptian and Greek historians around 300 BC. Khufu's obituary is presented there in a conflicting way: while the king enjoyed a long-lasting cultural heritage preservation during the period of the Old Kingdom and the New Kingdom, the ancient historians ManethoDiodorus and Herodotus hand down a very negative depiction of Khufu's character. Thanks to these documents, an obscure and critical picture of Khufu's personality persists.

• • •

It's hard to explain how tedious I find puzzles like this. There's a visual gag, so we can admire the architecture of the thing, sure, but solving it was mostly a dry and dull and trivia-laden experience. It is interesting to learn who KHUFU is. I know CHEOPS, as that is what the ancient Romans (apparently) called him, but KHUFU? Is that name exceedingly well known? If so, dear lord why does it not appear in the grid way, way more often. A five-letter answer ending in "U"!? You'd think we'd've seen that a lot (lot) by now. Instead, KHUFU is literally making its NYTXW debut here, today. If the name had made earlier crossword appearances, as I'd expect a name of real historical import to do, then I'd've seen the name before, which, as far as I know, I haven't, or hadn't, until the exact moment of solving this puzzle. Which means KHUFU is just ... more trivia. I can do further research ... but again, at the solving level, even if I know KHUFU's name, the whole "discovery" experience is more of a slog than a revelation. Felt like I was building the damn pyramids instead of admiring them. Filling in squares (or circled squares) in a kind of paint-by-numbers / programmatic way until the whole thing was filled in. THE GREAT PYRAMID OF GIZA, unlike KHUFU, is very familiar to me, and so filling in those squares was a cinch, even though I honestly didn't look to see what the letters were until late. I mostly just tried to solve this like a regular crossword, kind of a themeless. I could see it was about a pyramid and I just took the trivia answers as they came (was happy to remember CHEOPS, though to be honest I wrote in PELOPS in there at first...). Wrong -OPS. Anyway, I'm just never going to be a fan of the puzzle where I'm supposed to ooh and aah at the cleverness of the architecture, but where the pleasure of the solving experience itself seems not to have been given any consideration. Visual pyrotechnics are fine, but this is just a trivia test with two unusual visual elements; no wordplay, no actual trickery, no cleverness (beyond, again, the obvious cleverness of the visual design). Is ENCRYPT supposed to be a bonus theme answer, a kind of wink at the solver? (68A: Make secret, in a way). KHUFU is indeed ENCRYPTed, after all. If so, I think it's my favorite part of the whole puzzle. At least it shows a sense of humor.


I solved the puzzle using my Black Ink solving software, which warned me there would be visual elements that couldn't be reproduced, and suggested maybe I'd like to solve on the website itself. But the last time it gave me that warning was the magnet puzzle (from early last week), and I actually didn't end up liking having the "visual element" (in that case, a literal picture of a "magnet") presented for me. Would've been more fun / more of a challenge without it. So I thought I'd go ahead and solve in my software and just take my chances ... which was fine until the very end, when the only clue I had for KHUFU was 121A: This puzzle's subject. Me: "Uh ... CRYPT? MUMMY? How the hell should I know?!" So I had to go to the website after all, in the end, and there you got it completely spelled out for you, in a child's placement game sort of way: just transfer the letters from the numbered squares in the grid to their corresponding numbers in the KING'S CHAMBER, and you get K, H, U, F, U. No thought involved. Hardly a satisfying conclusion.

[This is the grid numeration as it appears in the newspaper]

There are some interesting non-theme answers in the grid. I especially liked THE BORG (I'm watching my way through "Star Trek: The Next Generation" at the moment) and HALF-READ (like half the books lying around my house at the moment) and WEE BIT, which is charmingly rather than irksomely quaint (58D: Tad). Weird that GERI and GERRY are both in this grid. Not offensive weird, just oddly coincidental weird. Not many trouble areas in the grid today. The EUROVAN (?) GROCERY TRACT area was a bit tough, but starting the puzzle is often the toughest part, so that's not too weird. Other than that, I think I was slowest in and around the KING'S part of KING'S / CHAMBER. Didn't know KING'S, and then the Oscar Wilde play ("SALÔME") took a while to see (100A: One-act Oscar Wilde play), and also I wrote in MUJERES instead of SEÑORAS, which is several levels of bizarre, the first level being that "Mujeres" is actually in the clue (!)  (66D: Mujeres con esposos) (and yes, I did also consider ESPOSAS, thanks for asking). But all other mistakes I made were trivial. FAVA for SOYA, that kind of thing (106A: ___ bean). Quickly fixed, insignificant. The grid is really quite clean, especially considering the demands placed upon it by the complicated architecture. It's also reasonably interesting. Not scintillating, but by no means dull. 


There's not much that needs explaining. I don't think I get the phrasing on the clue for SAP (87A: Frequent victim of an April fool). I thought the SAP was the "April fool." Is "fool" supposed to be a synonym for "trick" or "prank" here? Because the pranker can't possibly be the "fool." Whatever—the clue would make more sense if it were longer: [Frequent victim of an April Fools' joke], something like that. Not that anyone is going to stumble on that. I just like clear, precise phrasing is all. I don't know why a horse should be voting ... I mean, I get the "neigh" / NAY thing, but it's a very weird premise for a "?" clue (63A: Opposing vote from a horse?). Usually "?" have plays on words, but this one's just like "hay ... what if horses voted, what would that be like?" Weird. I think that's it. Hope you enjoyed this more than I did. Happy KHUFU to you. Enjoy the rest of your day.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld 

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

172 comments:

Joaquin 12:04 AM  

The constructor of today’s puzzle is only 14 years old. Some may think this is quite a feather in young August’s cap, but I say, “Big deal.” When I was 14, I was already setting off cherry bombs in the schoolyard and I had a personal relationship with the vice-principal. So there!

jae 12:19 AM  

Easy except for Equip before ENDOW and the time it took to fill in the bottom squares. Pretty impressive, enjoyed it more than @Rex did.

Z 12:25 AM  

It doesn’t matter how many intricacies you pile into your puzzle, a tribute puzzle is still the second lowest xword type. Figured out the theme about a tenth of the way into the solve and then it was just a trivia hunt. Finished wondering if the RYE amusement park has a pyramid ride.

I wonder what the constructor’s clue was for GERRY. If you knew GERRY from the clue it’s because you’re closer to needing a pacemaker than to age 14.

Which will be more insufferable today, the fawning over the constructor’s age or the D FLAT ain’t C Sharp explanations? I realize that most of you haven’t spent a lot of time around a large numbers of 14 year olds. Being able to construct a crossword is only remarkable because most 14 year olds aren’t interested. Just as many are capable enough if the interest were there as any group of, say, 44 year olds. I did not much care for the theme, but this is competently done. Let’s hope he keeps at and goes beyond tribute puzzles in the future.

Z 12:35 AM  

**Wordle Alert**
Alrighty then. This is a wordle first. No spoilers please.

Wordle 281 4/6

⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛
🟨⬛⬛⬛⬛
⬛⬛⬛🟨🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

EdFromHackensack 12:40 AM  

I had Taken instead of TERSE for the clipped clue. and I started with eraS instead of AGES for 1D, and goT before BIT. Once that was cleared up it was smooth sailing. RYE Playland was a gimme, spent alot of time there in my youth. KHUFU I’ve never heard of, but it was basically given to us. I play the piano and C sharp = DFLAT in my world. Nice puzzle, August - keep it up.

Jim Spies 12:48 AM  

In an interesting bit of solving information probably only of interest to me, I was exactly 1 second off my average time solving Saturday's puzzle, and exactly 2 seconds off my average solving time for Sunday's. So, I suppose both puzzles were about average. I had MUMMY in the slot for a long time, because if I put the letters in from those squares while solving, I was getting _HUFU, which really made no sense to me. Didn't make much more sense when the website said I was complete with KHUFU in there, so I had to go to google at that point.

okanaganer 12:56 AM  

Yeah, once again, "This puzzle uses features which are not supported in this file format". But what could they be? The online grid is identical to what I see in Across Lite. The clues are identical; the circles identical. Rex spotted the gimmick: that on the web each square of KHUFU has a number. Never even noticed!

Even though in A.L. each KHUFU square was completely unchecked, I still had no trouble. Honestly, who doesn't know KHUFU!! Really.

(Writeover note: for 74d and 101a, GREAT PYRAMID also fits!!

Other writeovers: FEINTS before FEIGNS (both fit the clue!). And FURS for December purchases.

[Spelling Bee: Sat. 16 min to pg. Currently stalled at -1, missing a 6.]

WA 1:02 AM  

Khufu

Gesundheit!

Ken Freeland 1:28 AM  

This 14-year-old constructor has a bright future ahead with the NYT... he has already learned how to include the obligatory natick (REX-ALEX - - could have been just about any letter there).

Gary Jugert 1:33 AM  

KHUFU KARDASHIAN. He's got the best and worst HOTEL room. I guess they're offering COTs now?

Lots of time on Wikipedia learning trivia. Normal for me on Sundays. Met ECCE homo crossing ERIS and enjoyed learning about each.

chefwen 2:51 AM  

Got all my little squares filled in except for 121A. No idea, never heard of the dude. Not on my list of favorites, but at 14 years old, I am very impressed.

Anonymous 4:57 AM  

I decided to take a pass when I saw the grid. I was interested enough, however, to read Jeff's and Rex's reviews. I'll go do the LATX.

Conrad 5:17 AM  


Wanted "Enron revenue graph" for the circled squares but it didn't fit.

Anonymous 5:24 AM  

Ya know, for a 14 year old to have come up with this, I'm very impressed. I'm old enough to be his grandma (at least!) and I had to make 4 or 5 separate and extended tries at this puzzle to get it. It certainly was NOT "easy, mostly" for me, even though I very quickly saw the pyramid shape, saw that it HAD to be "the great pyramid at Giza" and knew it was one of the "seven wonders of the ancient world."

PS: I did like that the word 'encrypt' got worked in there!

Anonymous 5:47 AM  

I really enjoyed this one … but then, again, I have heard of Khufu so was able to fill that in without the hint. I’ve always been interested in Egyptian archeology, so also enjoyed the construction. Pretty impressive if this was from a fourteen year old.

Frantic Sloth 5:57 AM  

Holy cripes on a cracker. You know, if I had a nickel for every time I've heard of the pharaoh KHUFU, I could buy a cup of coffee in 1928.
What. The. Fuzzle??

Tried Cairo, then Egypt, then looked up the answer because -- hey! Let's not just put a WhoTheF in our puzzle, let's make him an orphan with no crosses, in a cute little black box sitting all by his lonesome, coy self.

Sad to say this ruined what was previously a fun solve for me, and I knew every damned one of the theme entries except KHUFU. To which I say "KHUFme? No, KHUF U!

Just an utterly obnoxious thing to do. And what does it do that makes it so special? Or clever? What the hell is that box anyway?? And why did it have to be completely cut off from the rest of the grid???

Is it grid art?? Mr. KHUFU lies in eternal rest within his sarcophagus, festooned with a dwarf flag pole sticking out of it??

Oh! So the little numbers correspond to the letters within those particular squares and I'm an idiot? Ah! The ultimate lookie-loo. Great. Okay then.

And so now we venture into the land of Acrostica. Don't forget to bring your googly eyes!


*sigh*


🧠🧠.75
🎉🎉🎉.75 solve minus 🎉🎉🎉🎉 annoyance discount = -.25🎉

Wordler 5:59 AM  

@Zed. Interesting. I wondered what you meant by "first" since Wordle, so I hear, doesn't repeat words. Now I know.

Wordle 281 4/6

⬜⬜⬜🟨⬜
🟨⬜🟨⬜⬜
🟨⬜🟩⬜🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

Frantic Sloth 6:00 AM  

@Zed 1235am Re: Wordle. Is it KHUFU??

OffTheGrid 6:04 AM  

Obviously this guy has a keen interest and some skills. Hopefully he will mature into less gimmicky construction as he progresses. I look forward to his themeless Fridays and Saturdays someday.

mmorgan 6:27 AM  

If I hadn’t known from the website note (where I got the crypt clue numbers that Across Lite didn’t show) that the constructor is 14, I’d probably have found this the slog Rex did. But knowing that — before I started — I found it amazing. Yes to all the gripes expressed here, but the kid has amazing potential.

Frantic Sloth 6:39 AM  

Rex, your KHUFUd (pronounced koo-food) pyramid is hilarious.

@Joaquin 1204am Oh! So you're a Renaissance man! 👍

Good day, y'all!

Harryp 6:40 AM  

Was Khufu ever interred in the main burial chamber along with the requisite treasures? Maybe not.

Lewis 6:46 AM  

Well, young August made crafting a junk-lite grid look easy, but it surely wasn’t, especially considering those circled letters, as diagonals make filling very difficult. It shows he’s quite a technician.

Just looking at the empty grid, with the island in black at the bottom and the huge string of circled letters, had me thinking that this was going to be fun, and after filling in quite bit in a short stretch, I realized that it wouldn’t be a great struggle, so I relaxed and let it enjoyably unfold, as I do with a beach novel.

It didn’t disappoint. I loved running into KHUFU – what a great name! – and ANASAZI popped into my head from I-don’t-know-where, to my great delight. I liked seeing TOGO crossing TOGA, and smiled at the sentence formed by three consecutive horizontal answers: BREADED RHENIUM, I HATE IT! which itself was crossed by EAT!

Just a lovely experience all around. The puzzle even kindled long-time-no-visit memories of when I went to the Great Pyramid some 40 years ago. Thank you for making this, August!

Lewis 6:46 AM  

FYI, regarding youngest NYT constructors… The youngest is Daniel Larson (13 years, 4 months). August is fifth on the list (14 years, 5 months). Other names you may recognize include David Steinberg (14 years, 6 months), Paolo Pasco (15 years, 2 months), and Will Nediger (16 years, 5 months). Oh, I shouldn’t forget Merl Reagle (17 years, 1 month), Sam Ezersky (17 years, 1 month), Joel Fagliano (17 years, 2 months).

The full list is here: https://www.xwordinfo.com/Youngest .

Colin 6:48 AM  

Congratulations and hats off to our young(est) constructor! I enjoyed August's puzzle, and this feat of construction. I had only vaguely heard of KHUFU, but I don't think the point was for one to know KHUFU - just fill in the letters in the chamber once done with the rest. I won't complain about something I don't know - I simply don't know it (I didn't know ANASAZI either, and neither did my wife, who lived in AZ for several years).

LOL, for "Some December purchases," I initially considered FURS but knew in the 21st century, there was no way...

The Joker 6:51 AM  

I'm much more impressed by what Mozart did while a child. Although I read that he thought C-sharp and D-flat were equivalent.

frankbirthdaycake 6:53 AM  

The constructor is 14. I think this is a nice puzzle – first Sunday – and a fine feat for someone that age. Perhaps Rex could take that into consideration when he writes his reviews, especially considering the friendly tone commenters generally take with his college-age guest-bloggers (who are still quite a bit older than today’s constructor).

Anonymous 6:54 AM  

I thought KHUFU was that dude from Lybia.

Anonymous 6:55 AM  

@Zed, Well, the fawning is well under way.

kitshef 7:09 AM  

Love the idea that a 9th-grader knows GERRY and the Pacemakers.

Solve went AD ASTRA, ACHE, DOERS, and then I hit 15D based on which I filled in 15D, 5D, 51A and all the circled letters. That’s a big giveaway … probably two thirds of the answers cross at least one of those.

Could not figure out why ancestral Puebloan would not fit in 122A.

Anonymous 7:19 AM  

It was precisely because of the puzzle's architecture, the technical skill involved,the ancient Egyptian theme, and my admiration for a 14 year old that I loved doing this puzzle.

Anonymous 7:21 AM  

The printed version of the online puzzle does not include the five square numbers, so there is no clue to the guy. I had to pull KHUFU out of my ... ear. I saw the numbers while checking my written answers against the online solution. Bummer.

Joe Dipinto 7:44 AM  

@F-Slo – the Wordle answer is MOTEL but everyone is griping on Twitter that HOTEL works just as well.

Speaking of which, I had COW for 101d. Every hotel I've stayed at has offered me a COW in the morning so that I could have fresh milk. Motels offer COTs; hotels offer COWs. Autocamps offer KHUFU.

Son Volt 7:45 AM  

Build chops obviously there - but just not a lot of fun to solve. Encyclopedic with its facts and trivia - it may turn some on but for me it turns into a Sunday sized chore. The grid art forces too many 3s and 4s that don’t help. I liked SALOME, THE BORG, TEAR DROPS and others - there are some flashy non-theme entries here.

Wanted transitive in lieu of SYLLOGISM since the clue is in mathematical form. The SO CAL cluing is clunky.

It’s fantastic that we have a 14 yo constructor here - good luck to him.

SouthsideJohnny 7:59 AM  

Very much agree with OFL today - very impressive work by the young constructor, but the solving experience was pretty horrible. I’m sorry, but there is just too much crap in the grid. Just look at the southeast for example, the section is pretty much comprised of THEBORG, RHENIUM, ABRAM and ANASAZI ! ! ! The grid is chock full of this stuff - ADASTRA and the Spice Girl up in the NE, add in some TATAMI, YEOH, ERIS, SOLI (the made up word of the day) and well, it’s just not a pretty picture.

Personally I feel that gimmicks like the nonsense clue for SENORAS which appears to be something like “many spouses” in Spanish, Mexican or perhaps Portuguese (hell it could even mean that in Venezuelan for all I know) should be a capital offense - but I have been swimming upstream on that one for years.

The clue for GROCERY seems off - a zucchini is a GROCERY. A GROCERY STORE is where the CARTS are, along with the GROCERIES. Probably close enough for CrossWorld, but it added clunkiness to an already very clunky grid.

Indian Matka 8:12 AM  
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pmdm 8:23 AM  

Sometimes when I read some of the comments here I think about considering whether a glass is half full or half empty. Some tend to emphasize what makes them smile rather what makes them frown, and others tend to the opposite. I admit to trying to overlook the garbage to appreciate the gold. So I liked this puzzle despite being concerned over some of the elements.

I did not know the name that filled the unchecked entry, but it was pretty easy filling it in from the crosses. Oops, said that wrong and but I'm not sure exactly how to word what I an thinking. In a nutshell, I learned the name without any trouble.

While the county still owns Playland, it will now be run by a private company thanks to Astorino, former county executive. There will be some deviation in the rides there, but to my knowledge there never has been a ride associated with a pyramid. Unless you want to say the old Magic Carpet (which lamentably burnt down with the funhouse, neither of which were rebuilt) simulates the experience.

Dan Ruby 8:25 AM  

Wordle 281 3/6

⬛🟨⬛⬛🟨
⬛⬛🟨🟩🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

Joaquin 8:28 AM  

@SouthsideJohnny (7:59) - The constructor's clue for GROCERY is not just "close enough", it's right on the money. The #1 definition of GROCERY is "a grocer's store or business"; ergo: a [Place with carts].

Nancy 8:31 AM  

First of all, I "kept the faith". I dutifully filled in KHUFU in the unchecked 5 squares -- simply recreating the letters I already had in those numbered squares. It read like complete gibberish, so I looked up KHUFU and -- sonofagun, KHUFU is a Pharaoh!!!!! Wow!!!! That makes me so happy!!!!

But something else was very wrong!!!!! What on earth was THE GREAT PYRAMID OF NIZA??????? This is what happens when you don't know "villainous Star Trek collective". Mine was THE BORn (why not?) which fit with my FEIntS for "fakes". Such a perfect answer, but I had to find a way to come up with GIZA. Oh, yes, if I change FEINTS to FEIGNS and I change THE BORN to THE BORG, that will work. And now I have RHENIUM instead of RHETIUM which I like an awful lot better.

Oh, and I cannot tell a lie. I cheated on ABRAM -- or I never would have solved.

I cannot believe that this elegantly constructed and intricate puzzle -- a puzzle meant for grownups, btw, -- was created by a 14-year-old who's a freshman in high school. It just blows my mind. But don't get too immersed in the crossword world, August. You might just end up being the person who cures cancer or finds a scientific way to reverse global warming. AD ASTRA, August in whatever you do-- you're quite a remarkable young man.

Anonymous 8:33 AM  

Didn’t know THEBORG (THE BORG ?) or YEOH so I DNFEd with TWEBORG and YEOW. Oh well.

Rug Crazy 8:36 AM  

I'll take Tofu over Khufu, any day.

T. Ipper 8:39 AM  

"An Inconvenient Truth" was rated R?

kitshef 8:42 AM  

@Nancy, @Late Solver yesterday. Rex has called them "Colloquial equivalency clues", which is a bit long. I've tried CECs (pronounced as "sex"), for short, but it ain't great. How about VErnacular Clues, or vecs (pronounced 'vex')?

pabloinnh 8:42 AM  

What did I miss? My printed version had no clues that I saw for filling in the isolated squares at the bottom, other than "this puzzle's subject". Five letters? I guessed EGYPT, because it fit, and I'm still happy with it, as guessing KHUFU with no other information would have taken longer than guessing RUMPLESTILTSKIN. Jeez.

Otherwise I mostly sailed through this with the exception of the SE, where my book was first HALFOPEN and then HALFSHUT before HALFREAD showed up. Didn't know THEBORG and finally ABRAM appeared from somewhere to save the day.

Agree with OFL that solving felt a lot like building a PYRAMID, across, down, across, down, and so on.

Good for you, AL-K. A Lotta Knowledge for one so young, and thanks for mostly fun, except for the final mystery answer (see above).

Mr. Grumpypants 8:54 AM  

What a waste of time -- for the constructor and the solver.

Z 8:56 AM  

@Anonymous7:21 & @pabloinnh - If you scroll down and select the “Newspaper Version” to print you get the numbers. I do that every day because you never know when something unusual is going to be in the puzzle, but it’s probably most important to print that version on Sunday and Thursday.
And no, I don’t know why the “standard version” cannot reflect the newspaper version. Or why they don’t offer a weekday newspaper version without the previous day solution. AVCX manages to offer me my choice of pdf from full color with previous solutions to an ink saver version. But I guess they don’t have to format for a newspaper.

@Froth 6:00 am - 🤣😂🤣😂🤣
@Joe Dipinto 7:44 am - ditto
@T. Ipper - It took me a precious nanosecond, but ditto.

bocamp 8:57 AM  
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Amie Devero 9:01 AM  

Maybe it's just me, but I cannot figure out how they approve a puzzle who's critical revealer cannot be replicated on all of the platforms on which people play it. I print out the puzzle from The New York Times website. You would think that the key numbers would appear in 121 across on that version. But they don't. Instead all I have is the 121 across clue. And the numeral 121 at the corner of that five letter across space sitting all by itself, with nothing to go on. And, as Rex points out, I am not an Egyptologist, and so, have never seen the word KHUFU. Getting a DNF this way infuriates me.

Unknown 9:20 AM  

“Sap” is the fool. As in “that poor sap”

Nausee 9:21 AM  

Did I miss something? Was there any way to infer KHUFU from the rest of the puzzle? Or was it a standalone bit of trivia that you either knew or didn’t know?

Anonymous 9:21 AM  

I thought it was fun. I learned who Khufu was. Seemed like a good thing. BUT please don’t put the answer to Wordle in your comments for those who haven’t done it yet.

Noreen 9:23 AM  

This was great and fun puzzle! And even more impressive considering that a 14 year old constructed it! Wow! And I found it more fun to discover the Great Pyramid, Cheops, and Khufu. I stuck with feints (99D) for a long time but then learned Rhenium for future use. Congratulations! to August; keep them coming!

amyyanni 9:24 AM  

Impressive work, August. As for Rex's last point, when I was very young and learning my name, it came out "Nay Wanni." My then teenage brother went ahead and wrote that inside all my Little Golden Wonder Books in the "This book belongs to:" square. In black sharpie. So Nay became a family nickname.🙄

Unknown 9:28 AM  

If the constructor is reading comments, nice job! You have a bright future ahead of you!

Joe Welling 9:31 AM  

Anyone else like to do the LA Times and NYT puzzles in tandem? They seem to always have one or two connections. Today "ECCE" made both puzzles, and THE BORG connected to the LAT Star Trek pun theme.

SouthsideJohnny 9:35 AM  

@Joaquin - good catch, I stand corrected. I check the definitions for secondary meanings about 90% of the time. I was so sure of myself that I skipped the verification step. I have enough trouble parsing together the PPP and other arcane stuff with which I am not familiar - but I should know better than to flub up an easy one like that.

Birchbark 9:35 AM  
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burtonkd 9:38 AM  

today's kealoa brought to you by the soya/fava/lima Goya bean consortium

@Z - when was this great music theory kerfuffle that people refer to every so often? I'm sorry to have missed that one.
Just for the record, if you are playing a keyboard instrument, they are the same, but on a string instrument or when singing, you may adjust them differently depending on the key or chord. Of course they also work differently from the music theory point of view. Clue is just fine.

Ed Rosenthal 9:42 AM  

Impressed by the age of the constructor but too many arcane answers for me. And the worst clue/answer combo I’ve ever seen in a NY Times puzzle was 30D “Pass it on” for gene. How can you clue a noun answer with a vague phrase? Shouldn’t it be “something passed on” or am I missing some nuance?

Anonymous 9:46 AM  

Loved it! Very clean fill considering the substantial theme content. Amazing work for a 14-year-old.

thefogman 9:49 AM  

Huge triumph points for anyone who solved today’s extra-challenging Wordle.

Wordle 281 4/6*

⬜⬜⬜⬜⬜
⬜⬜⬜🟨🟨
⬜⬜🟩🟩🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

RooMonster 9:53 AM  

Hey All !
Well, KHUFU me. Didn't see the different numbered boxes in ole KHUFU's sarcophagus, even after wondering why the number stayed white while the rest of the box turned yellow like it always does when you click on the square. Maybe the 121 Across in the clue list could've had something else, like a - ? Yes, apparently I need my hand held. Or the ole brain held. Had to Goog for KHUFU, never having heard of the old boy. How is he not more familiar than King Tut? Silly brain. Did have everything else correct. So if only I had paid a bit of attention to the numbers, I'd'a been grinning like the cat that ate the mouse. (Or whatever that saying is.) As it sits, with my Goog, I take it as a personal DNF, even if the computer gave me the Happy Music.

Yes, @Z, going to say Wow about this being constructed by a 14 year old kid. I made a few puzs while in High School, but extremely amateurish (as is any of my puzs 😁).

This kid, I'm at xwordinfo right now (great pic, btw!), his first puz was 10/9/2021, and it was a SatPuz, with a Five Stack of 9's in the center! Next was a ThursPuz, 3/3/2022, the one where you had to JUSTADDWATER. Remember that one? The H2O (HHO) were missing from the Themers. Today's is his third. So Holy KHUFU, wondering how many he whipped up in a short time frame, as only 24 days twixt puzs being published is amazing. I want to be August when I grow up!

Party at August's house!

Or we can have the party in RYE, after having fun at the amusement park, we'll head over to @Z's Placebo and Tentacle Pub for BREADED KHUFU and a DRAFT(EE) PABST.

yd -12 (lots of big uns), should'ves 5 (lots of uns I didn't know!)

Five F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

Birchbark 9:57 AM  

I don't think THE BORG are conscious of their villainy. It is more the effect of a hive-mind that lacks moral compass.

This puzzle has the twists, turns and trapdoors of last Sunday with high-value answers (CHEOPS, KHUFU, SYLLOGISM, ENCRYPT) in place of last week's neon flash -- this to my taste the better puzzle. Despite a rare DNF at KHUFU -- I had "mummy," missing the numbered-square hint. Fair.

LIMESTONE as clued is a perfect detail. I hauled a WEE BIT of it in a backpack last summer, up the hill and through the woods, back to our house as we improved our front stoop. It's not a very dense stone: 5.5 million tons is nothing to sneeze at.

On Friday evening at 8:46 CST, I finished my backwards journey through the Archives. I have done every one of Will Shortz's solo-edited puzzles, over 10,300, going back over 27 years to late 1994 --an AGE when CDs were clued "Modern records," VOICEMAIL was a "Modern message," and Naticks swam the grids like unfettered sea serpents.

Many observations great and small from this quixotic experience -- for now, I'll just say that OBOE may be the most dependable word in the English language.

Anonymous 10:03 AM  

This is not a crossword puzzle. It's a test to see if you know the word KHUFU. Do better NY Times.

Nancy 10:13 AM  

What great blog comments today! So far my faves -- the ones that made me laugh out loud -- are @Frantic's at 6:00 and Joe D's at 7:44. And the morning's still young.

For everyone who didn't have numbers in the casket where KHUFU is buried, I bleed for you, I really do. If I hadn't had numbers, I'd be shaking my fist at the heavens and cursing Amen-Ra. (Where is he, by the way? Everything else that's Egyptian is there.) But with numbers, unearthing KHUFU and then finding out who the hell he is is part of the fun.

From yesterday: @Kitshef, I love "vecs" -- if only because it's pronounced "vex". And from today: @Zed -- I just did Wordle in 4. What's so first-timey about it?

TJS 10:29 AM  

Man, that week off really did wonders for Rex' frame of mind. A solid week of reaching for a nits. (And I was one who welcomed him back).

One of the better Sunday solves I have had in a long time. And an interesting feat of construction. A Sunday to cheer about, Wahoo !

Beezer 10:30 AM  

@thefogman, the fact that you said the Wordle was extra-challenging caused me to put in a more “exotic” first word:

Wordle 281 3/6

⬜⬜🟨🟩⬜
⬜⬜⬜🟩🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

Chicago Chica 10:31 AM  

I really enjoyed this, Rex. It’s hardly the constructor’s fault if you are the last person on the planet to learn who KHUFU / CHEOPS is. I totally enjoyed this Sunday. Lighten up.

Mike in Bed-Stuy 10:37 AM  

I am relatively new around here. What's all this about "trivia"? Are you folks using it as a synonym for "knowledge"? Sometimes referred to as "cultural capital"? Here's a bit of trivia for you, found on Wikipedia: "Pierre Bourdieu and Jean-Claude Passeron coined and defined the term cultural capital in the essay 'Cultural Reproduction and Social Reproduction' (1977)."

bocamp 10:38 AM  

Thx August; very nicely put together Sun. Puz! :)

Easy-med.

Moved thru this one smoothly until the dnf at KHUFU, which afaik I've not heard nor seen before (CHEOPS was no help). I searched far and wide for some clue or note with a hint to something that would lead me to this unknown word, but alas, no dice. lol [update: must have closed my eyes when I 'searched far and wide' bc I didn't focus on the numbers for the letters in the chamber. d'oh!] Even then, no guarantee I'd have gotten it right. I'll never know. 🤔

I made the right guess at the PAM / MMA cross, but would have caught a mistake there due to the circled letters.

Liked the theme. I've got mnemonics to help recall the SEVEN WONDERS OF THE ANCIENT WORLD and where they're located, but it just never occurred to me to find out who was interred in the tomb.

Anyhoo, a fun romp. :)

Thx to all who gave shoutouts to the Sat. Stumper. Much tougher than the NYT Sat; esp the SW corner and long 'rave' cross. Excellent workout, and good result! :)
___
td (no g, no p; two days in a row, no go) / W: 3* (I use another word for Octordle which would have fit the bill, but went with the correct one for today's 3)

Wordle 281 3/6*

⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛
⬛⬛⬛⬛🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

Peace 🙏 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🕊

Nancy 10:39 AM  

As some of you know, I usually post the comments I write for this blog on the Wordplay Blog as well. I started doing this when someone taught me how to cut and paste: now, posting on Wordplay wouldn't involve any additional effort on my part.

There's a big difference, however, in what the commentariat prizes on each blog. In Rexworld, wit and originality are especially valued, followed closely by revealing and amusing personal reminiscences. On Wordplay, what's valued is 1)How Effusively You Praise The Puzzle and 2)How Much You Encourage The Newbie Solver. Someone says that he just completed his first Friday ever without looking anything up and someone else answers him: "That is so great!!!! I'm really proud of you!!!!" and the answerer garners 53 "Recommended"s for this banal statement.

But every once in a very great while someone writes something really clever -- and it happened today. I'm reproducing this Wordplay comment here (without revealing the poster's identity, since I don't have his/her permission). I think you'll enjoy the comment:

Mysterious structured crosswords taking years to construct, found all over the world,
Magnificent monuments, emitting powerful word energy. Once you enter letters into these crosswords, you
have the feeling you are in the presence of an extraordinary intelligence.
Were they really built as a crossword chamber? Or did they serve another, much more profound purpose?

Millions of people around the world believe in the past we were visited by Extraterrestrials...what if...it were true.
Did ancient aliens really help to shape today's crossword?
And if so, might there be an extraterrestrial connection behind the secret of this pyramid?

Ancient astronaut theorists say yes.
August Lee-Kovach...may never tell.


Anonymous 10:40 AM  

It should be noted Anasazi is an outdated term as it means "ancient enemies" in Navajo. The modern term used today is Ancestoral Pueblons.

https://indianpueblo.org/what-does-anasazi-mean-and-why-is-it-controversial/

TJS 10:46 AM  

@Southside, keep swimming...Jeezus.

Amy 10:47 AM  

Loved this! So fun! Thanks, August! And keep it up!

Ellen 10:48 AM  

Lol

Welmet 10:52 AM  

Amazed at a 14 year old’s.breadth of knowledge and construction skills. Wait until he is 15

Anonymous 10:52 AM  

In the print edition, each of the 5 squares of KHUFU is marked with a number, and the letter in the KHUFU line is exactly the same as the letter in that numbered square.

So it's a total no brainer once you have filled out the rest of the puzzle. And very possibly, if you catch on to the gimmick, it might help you with those five squares in the regular part of the puzzle.

No big deal, unless you are maintaining a streak of consecutive wins.

Ellen 10:55 AM  

Apparently, some software had #s in each box that corresponded to squares on the grid. O use the NYT crossword app and the clue was listed as 121A. Ugh

Mike in Bed-Stuy 10:55 AM  

As I keep saying by way of introduction, I'm relatively new around here, and that is the context in which I question some of the folkways of this blog and its devoted commenters. Why is it an issue for some of you when the entry is a word you didn't know? For me, part of the fun of crosswords is learning new words. I did not know KHUFU. But my response, rather than annoyance, was simply to think, "Okay, guess I'd better find out what's in 74, 92, 21, 52, and 118." Some of you seem to have solved this puzzle using a software that did not display those numbers, which of course makes the task more difficult (impossible, I would think). And you gripe about that. But FFS, don't blame the puzzle or its constructor for the fact that so many of you no longer solve your crosswords by taking a pen to your newspaper. Peace out.

Michiganman 10:57 AM  

As always, the opinions of the puzzle vary. I think it's insulting and patronizing to say, "Good puzzle for 14 year old". Would anyone dare say "Good puzzle for a woman"? It impresses me that ANYONE can construct a crossword puzzle. It is not more impressive to me that a 14 yo can.

Ellen 11:01 AM  

Wish the NYT xword app folks had put the individual #s in the squares denoting the king's chamber.

Because of that decision, I was clueless

Mike in Bed-Stuy 11:05 AM  

I don't think one can reasonably blame the publication or the editor or the constructor for the shortcomings of software. Crosswords were born in print, and it's up to the metaverse to accommodate real life—Not the other way around.

Anonymous 11:13 AM  

Wish the editors had honored this 14 year old by making the transferred letters print out properly, and editting the puzzle to get rid of the Natick-like bloc in the southeast. This kid has a bright future in construction, and likely lots of things, but the grown-ups in the room should've fixed a couple of things... Thanks for the fun, though!

Juan 11:19 AM  

A word about the use of "Anasazi": https://indianpueblo.org/what-does-anasazi-mean-and-why-is-it-controversial/ The Pueblo Indians lay claim to being descendants of the "Anasazi". The Pueblos are noted for: https://taos.org/explore/landmarks/taos-pueblo/

Blue Stater 11:20 AM  

No, I did not enjoy this more than OFL. Less, in fact. Isolating the final and by far the most difficult answer without crosses or help is inexcusable. Sorry, 14-year-old, but WS did you no favors by accepting this self-reflexive mess.

Anonymous 11:20 AM  
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Canon Chasuble 11:23 AM  

I a still laughing out loud and tearing up while doing so at the best and funniest comments I think I have ever read. And on top of a great puzzle, too. Thank you all, bloggers, for making this a fun-based morning.

GILL I. 11:24 AM  

KHU who? Was he a khudabad missing some SYLLOGISM in his kahunas soup?
I missed the ANASAZI boat. Should I have taken my ADASTRA EUROVAN to go see a star?
YEOH....I want ECCE and IOS to help me up on my horse with no teeth.
Phew....I got that off my heaving chest.
OK...so we all know that August is a 14 year old who really knows how to spell, and draw, and is quite clever, and has a nifty visual concept right here in this here puzzle that I began to like but then the bean began to taste like a few GAMETES. Some was pleasant, a few tasted like some reflected rank in Old Rome and, well, the GROCERY store ran out of carts.
When I was 14, I was lucky to be able to watch "I Love Lucy." I was good at sucking pirulis, and I still believed I could catch a fish with a piece of bamboo stick, a piece of rope and a bobby pin with some stale bread hanging on for dear life. I failed.
I am impressed you even knew how to spell KHUFU. You are one smart cookie and I'm betting you can dance a fandango tango without stepping on my toes.

@Nancy from late last night:
BUT of course I will provide a feast for everyone...How does this sound?:
Moros y Cristianos along with some Rope Vieja. You have to wait while I roast a suckling pig because we're also having Lechon Asado. Help yourself to the Yuca con Mojo and my Platanos Frito. For dessert, I think you'll enjoy my flan. If someone happens to be in Havana at this moment...you can always stop by any "timbiriche" and order a Pan con Lechon.
I'll keep the Cuba Libres flowing.....or the Daiquiris...or the Mojitos...You might yell "Que Bolo."
Que tengan hambre y sed.

Joseph Michael 11:26 AM  

On my planet, except for the 121, there are no numbers in the entombed boxes, so even though I solved the puzzle, I had no idea who was buried in that thing. And I still don’t. KHUFU who?

But if you can construct a puzzle like this when you’re 14, you are one of the wonders of the modern world.

Wright-Young 11:39 AM  

Jeez, could we please refrain from posting Wordle spoilers?? Wth

Sel 11:41 AM  

Kudos to August!

bertoray 11:50 AM  

And a happy KHUFU to you sir.

Anonymous 11:56 AM  

@Michiganman ... what a terrible analogy

Mary McCarty 12:01 PM  

@Ellen: I use the app and the numbers were printed,(maybe because I’m in CA, an maybe the problem had been fixed by the time I woke up) tho strangely, I didn’t see them til the end. But, really, SO MANY people complaining about a trivial thing, since not knowing KHUFU didn’t affect any other answers in the way other obscure PPP can.

I find it really interesting that so many solvers put in wrong answers without verifying by crosses. Like Rex with pelOPS (I’m surprised he knows that name, but his knowledge of Greek mythology is pretty superficial) but why not check 8A? What else could it be but SOCAL? 28D could’ve been ERoS, except for the LIMESTONE running through it. Eras for AGES isn’t obvious, what with no crosses yet at the beginning of the puzzle. People, you’ll save yourself both time and grief if you just verify guesses by crosses—Naticks are relatively rare.

Teedmn 12:02 PM  

I had a few things in common with Rex today - I knew CHEOPS and had no idea that was an AKA for KHUFU. When I got to KHUFU's chamber, solving without the special numbers, I merely hit "reveal", too lazy to hunt up the NYT version to find the trick. The gridwork on this puzzle is admirable and I love the extras like LIMESTONE. Though I kept looking for "valley" to show up, as in the Valley OF THE KINGS. Now Googling the valley, I find that it is about 300 miles away from the Great Pyramid of Giza so CHAMBER fits and valley doesn't.

I had many, many write-overs today - when you solve randomly, you don't get crosses to work off so "rots" before LOOT, eraS before AGES, zero before NOON, etc. Only two are semi-interesting: SYNC for "Harmonize" was first SiNg and ENDOW started out as Equip, for "Provide resources for". Maybe semi-interesting is a wee bit overstating it :-).

@Birchbark, thank you for your insight into THE BORG; I thought "villainy" was not accurate in the clue but couldn't put my finger on why it seemed wrong.

August, great job on making your Egyptian inspiration into such an amazing puzzle, thanks!

RooMonster 12:08 PM  

@Mike in Bed-Stuy
On your phone, your comment appears directly underneath the intended comment. Great. However, on a computer, it doesn't appear directly below. It appears in time order, so your posts seem like either random babblings, or no one knows who they are meant for.

When you start your post, use the @whoever header, like I did for you, @Mike in Bed-Stuy, and then you'll be crystal clear.

I'm not yelling or chiding you (in case that's how it came across, and if so, sorry!), I just would like you to know how it works. 🙂

RooMonster Acting Like I'm A Computer Literate Guy

egsforbreakfast 12:08 PM  

@chefwen 2:51 am. I would have thought you were much older than 14. But now that I know, I’m even more impressed with your comments.

Spent yesterday on a plane after a week in Tulum. So Aztec, Inca or Mayan pyramids were on my mind when I saw the shape of the circled squares. Had to quickly wrench the old NOB over to a different bunch of pyramid-nuts.

Interesting that yesterday we got the rare crossed kealoa and today we got the equally rare tripaloa with, as has already been pointed out, consists of lima/fava/SOYA. A quadriloa if you count Goya.

I’ve never been to RYE, but now that I know they have both an amusement park and a marina, no more Tulum vacays for this SAP.

@Nancy 8:31 am. I know that you freely profess to have little memory capacity, but 107D ABRAM has appeared 109 times in the Shortz era clued more or less as it is today. There are some other ways ABRAM has been clued, but their numbers pale in comparison to the James ABRAM Garfield approach.

I say this would be a very good, enjoyable and clean Sunday irregardless (and even regardless) of any unusual characteristics of the constructor. Thank you, August Lee-Kovach.

MarthaCatherine 12:14 PM  

KHUFU is a lot like kung fu, but with a whole different skill set.

Anonymous 12:15 PM  

I believe that the clue for 33 down is incorrect. The clue implies multiple solo performances—the term “soli” doesn’t relate to more than one solo; it refers to a single soloist performing while accompanied by a section of a backing orchestra. I have seen this clueing error in prior puzzles.

smalltowndoc 12:16 PM  

First, I really enjoyed this puzzle. The subject of the theme is well-known to all, one of the most important human-made landmarks on Earth. The other theme answers hit on most of the important facts of the subject.

Second, I believe KHUFU is more than fair. It’s common knowledge to anyone who ever made it through high school. I certainly didn’t learn about the Great Pyramids in college (chem major) and certainly not in Med School, but I had no problem with it. The old guy and I go way back (Mrs. Holland’s 9th grade World History class, I think).

Third, as has been already been pointed out, if you weren’t familiar with KHUFU, each letter was "crossed" in a clever way, numbers directing the solver to other squares in the puzzle.

Now, I understand some people didn’t see any numbers in the entombed pharaoh’s squares on their NYTXW app. That’s peculiar because that’s the app I use, on my iPad. So, I’m curious what devices people who weren’t supplied with the numbers were using?

Z 12:26 PM  

@Mike in Bed-Stuy - Good questions and points. Here are my takes:
First, I have a strong preference for wordplay and language. If you take note of @Lewis’s clues of the week they are always based on wordplay. That’s the good stuff.
Knowledge based clues are just simply less interesting. But they exist on a continuum. Some knowledge based clues and answers are pretty universal and so are fine. But there’s a whole class of answers that I call trivial trivia. RHENIUM and it’s clue fall into this category. There is nothing inherently bad about that clue, but it really is a fairly useless factoid. And then there’s the whole other type that’s PPP (pop culture, product names, and other proper nouns). These have the potential to really skew difficulty. Look at some of the comments about THE BORG. Yep, if you are not a Star Trek fan how are you supposed to infer that answer? Or the REX/ALEX cross. That’s two names, names are often uninferable (see NIA and MIA in the puzzle). Yeah, “Dino” in the clue is supposed to make you think of T. Rex, but is it really surprising that someone might not understand that that is a hint? So when you see complaints about entries that are based on facts or factoids or PPP it is often around the fact that the answer is not inferable.
Second, “Cultural Capital” is an interesting concept. Implicit is that certain cultural capital is better than some other cultural capital. The NYTX has gotten better (Japan, Mexico, Native Americans, and Malaysia all make this puzzle) but it still centers the Cultural Capital of white males of a certain age. Cultural Capital answers are really just trivia and, in a diverse society, inherently exclusionary to some subset of solvers. Hence all the complaints you will see here when a HipHop artist appears.
Third, Why can’t we expect a billion dollar enterprise to solve software issues? Especially since a third party enterprise (that no longer has access to the NYTX) managed to faithfully recreate the the print version with their software for a decade until the NYT decided their profit interests are more important than their customers? I don’t blame the editorial team or constructor, but I do think this is the fault of the NYT. (You may not be aware that the NYT decided about a year ago to stop supporting third party access to their puzzle - the work around safe good enough most of the time).

@Ellen - ? - On my NYTX app the KHUFU numbers are there.

@Michiganman - Agreed, although I don’t think it’s intentional.

@Anon10:40 - Thanks for the link. I did not know that.

@Birchbark - Suddenly I’m seeing THE BORG as metaphor for the Crusaders. Thanks. I think.

JC66 12:30 PM  

@Anon 12:15

The clue for 33D is: Singers' star turns.

Mike in Bed-Stuy 12:30 PM  

@RooMonster
Not at all. Thank you for telling me that. Of course, my replies may nevertheless seems like random babblings, but that's a different issue.

Z 12:33 PM  

@anon12:15 - If a singer has a solo in Act I and another solo in Act II than she has two SOLI. Yeah, I don’t like it either but whatchagonnado.

Ando 12:40 PM  

Sounds like some 14-year-old peed in your cornflakes.

Ando 12:43 PM  

It's cut off from the grid because it's in a tomb. The numbers give the solve. I thought it was clever.

Anonymous 12:47 PM  

Didn't anyone read the clue for 10D: "Greek name for this puzzle's enclosed answer"?
After CHEOPS I wrote in KHUFU before I completed the rest of the puzzle. The answer needed no further clue.

Unknown 12:51 PM  

Loved the puzzle. Nice challenge, fun to solve and very clever. Didn’t know Khufu but learned about him! And the little numbers in Khufu were great, kept the solver from getting stuck if they didn’t know the name. No different than any standard across/down set of clues. (The “downs” were just from other parts of the grid). Impressive too how many themes got worked into the puzzle.

Mike in Bed-Stuy 12:56 PM  

@Zed — I appreciate your filling me in on the lore. Thank you for mentioning the phenomenon of commenters complaining about PPP when hip hop artists are included in puzzles. That's exactly what I'm getting at when I complain that people only seem to object to trivia when it's trivia they don't know. Some of those white men d'un certain âge are fine with Tony Bennett, but gripe about Lil Nas X. I'm a "Late Boomer," by the way (my term for those born in the US at the tail end of the Baby Boom, between 1960 and 1964, thereby overlapping slightly with Gen X). I reveled in the recent inclusion of DAVE CLARK in the NYTXW (although I think it should have been DAVE CLARK FIVE, as some folks commented that day), as I did in August's inclusion of GERRY and the Pacemakers today. As for those who griped, my response would be (and I think I actually did post this comment), don't blame the puzzle because you are ignorant about the British Invasion, one of the most important social, cultural, and musical phenomena of the 20th century. It's not exactly recherché, after all. Anyway...My discovery of the blog is a very dangerous thing, as I am a classicist and a theory head who specializes in language and culture, particularly pop culture and queer culture (odd for a classicist, I know, but there you have it, and the number of youngins following in my trailblazing path is growing all the time). And I'm becoming a crossword fiend at the ripe old age of 61. So I will probably have a lot about which to pontificate in these blog posts.

Hartley70 1:07 PM  

Ahhh! THEBORG. My favorite villain of all time. It’s a love/hate thing for me, but definitely scarier than a Dalek.

This puzzle was chock full of fun. I was hopping all over the grid and my boredom factor was zero. That’s unusual on a Sunday when sometimes the little answers can bog me down with ho him. CHEOPS was familiar but not KHUFU. Love it! I was confused until I found the little cross OFTHE and then could start the long down with ANCIENT.
I nearly finished up this morning with just two little words to go, but I’ll be darned if they didn’t stump me. I just tried again and DOWNPAT was finally staring at me as well as NOON. Eureka!

Masked and Anonymous 1:17 PM  

Dang. It took the constructioneer 14 years to come up with *this*? [har]

Pyramid burial chamber theme doesn't scream out SunPuz humorous, but I still kinda liked the puz. Due to stuff like:

* Different. M&A admires different. Shoot, the KHUFU answer's 74-92-21-52-118 numberin-pyramid-scheme alone was almost worth the price of solvequest admission.

* KHUFU punchline. Cute vowel selection in namin yer son, Snerfu dude.

* E/W puzgrid symmetry, with cool gridart. [Nice subtle shout out to the art, with ENCRYPT, btw.]

* THEBORG. Cousins of The Blorg -- Google's blog apparatus that loses my posts, occasionally.
(Not as enamored up with them nearby ABRAM/RHENIUM/ANASAZI fillins, tho.)

staff weeject pick: Lotsa choices. Wanna go with MMA. So then I can tout a far better clue, of {MPA's main squeeze??}.

Oh … way lost opportunity on AWARD's clue. Shoulda hinted at tonite's Oscar handouts. Allow M&A to help sorta compensate, with the runtpuz below...

Thanx for all yer pyramid schemin, young Mr. Lee-Kovach dude. Keep up the good work.

Masked & Anonymo6Us


**gruntz**

Airymom 1:23 PM  

Congratulations August. I predict you will be a member of the teen constructor Hall of Fame, joining David, Paolo and a handful of others.

Z 1:45 PM  

@Mike in Bed-Stuy - Not a classicist my self but there’s one in the family and my Twitter feed is littered with a bunch - it sounds like you’d agree with lots of them:
https://twitter.com/romanaegyptiaca
https://twitter.com/apothekeblog
https://twitter.com/nadhirawho
https://twitter.com/aitantihero
https://twitter.com/metalclassicist
https://twitter.com/sentantiq

@M&A - 😂🤣😂🤣😂

Anonymous 2:51 PM  
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
bigsteve46 3:06 PM  

You gotta be 21 to buy a drink in New York. I would like to see a similar law for the submission of a x-word puzzle to the New York Times. Go out and play some ball or something, junior - and take your rucksack full of trivia with you. You probably have four more of these puzzles that would make good bases. Bring back the adults!

Nancy 3:18 PM  

Yes, @egs (12:08), this, alas, is what it's like to not have a memory. Sigh. And the worst part is that if ABRAM appears in the exact same clue a year from now, I probably won't remember it then either. (Well, maybe now that you've scolded me, I do have a slightly better chance, scolding being something of a memory catalyst. But I wouldn't hold your breath.)

@kitshef and @GILL -- Your dinner prize, GILL, sounds so thoroughly awesome that it behooves me to try to beat @kitshef who's now in the lead for the best vernacular phrase term. I've come up with...

"Phrase 'equivalents' that are really different." PETARD

Meh. Back to the drawing board.

Eniale 3:20 PM  

Kicking self for not coming up with RHENIUM (never had chem at school) on account of Feints instead of FEIGNS.

@okanoganer, you're obviously a KING at SB; must have taken me half an hour to get p today; @bocamp sympathies on difficulties yesterday, I often quit at pg when there are so many words to get, and have sometimes needed to enlist hubby for p. He usually gets them in about 2 minutes max.

Carola 3:31 PM  

My own tween-age fascination with the wonders of the ancient world pre-disposed me toward solving this one with a smile. I loved writing in the complete name of the PYRAMID and enjoyed the "encrypted" name of the king in the chamber. Super construction, fun to figure out.

Joe Dipinto 3:57 PM  

KHUFU may be a NYTimes puzzle debut but he's turned up in the arts quite a bit. For example, in song lyrics:

The Who:
Whoooo are you?
Khu-fu. Khu-fu.


Simon & Garfunkhel:
Khu-ku-ku-Fu, Mrs Robinson
Jesus loves you more than you will know


In poetry:
Khufu Must Not Ring Tonight

And in theater:
One Flew Over the Khufu's Tomb

A toast to you, Khufu – who knew?!

oldactor 3:57 PM  

Loved the puzzle, love Egypt. Spent quite a bit of time in the King's chamber, was on a special tour. I even climbed in to the King's crypt for a while. I don't think the temperature in the chamber ever changes and is quite comfortable, but I realized I was soaked in sweat. My clothes clung to my body. I was absolutely drenched. No idea what that was about.

burtonkd 4:10 PM  

@joe - …they are the egg men, I am the walrus. Khu-fu khu-fu
Everybody loves khu-fu fighting

thefogman 4:22 PM  

Rex doesn’t hold back the criticism, most of which is valid, but hey - we’re talking about a 14-year old kid here.The fault lies with the editor for giving the green light to yet another new constructor who is still a diamond in the rough. Save the Mondays for new constructors’ debuts. Sundays should be reserved for the cream of the crop.

thefogman 4:31 PM  

Tried Quordle today. It’s like Wordle on steroids…

Daily Quordle #62
5️⃣7️⃣
8️⃣3️⃣
quordle.com
⬜🟨🟨⬜⬜ ⬜🟨⬜⬜🟨
⬜⬜🟩⬜⬜ ⬜⬜⬜⬜🟨
⬜⬜🟨⬜⬜ 🟨🟩⬜⬜⬜
⬜⬜⬜🟩⬜ ⬜⬜⬜🟨⬜
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩 ⬜⬜⬜🟨🟩
⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛ 🟨🟩⬜🟩🟩
⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛ 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

🟨🟨⬜⬜⬜ ⬜⬜🟩🟨🟨
⬜⬜⬜⬜⬜ ⬜⬜⬜🟩🟨
⬜⬜⬜⬜⬜ 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
⬜⬜🟨🟨⬜ ⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛
⬜⬜⬜🟨⬜ ⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛
🟨⬜⬜⬜⬜ ⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛
🟨⬜🟨⬜⬜ ⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩 ⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛

Deb Sweeney 4:46 PM  

I thoroughly enjoyed this one, zero criticisms honestly. To me this was both solid and fun. I think Khufu is an age thing. I was saying "Cheops?" and my 23-year-old daughter said "Khufu?" even before we looked at the number of letters in the crypt. And my younger son 100% knows this guy as Khufu. Guess you need to have learned this stuff after history books started to make an effort to call people by their actual names. Not that I am calling anyone old here. At least, older than I myself am.

Walk like an Egyptian 5:01 PM  

When King Tut was 14 he had already been a pharaoh for 6 yrs. Har!

Z 5:02 PM  

@2:51 - Did you need a recap of the history of the three and done rule? Also, everyone knows that my posts are required reading. Test on Thursday.*

@thefogman - As If. Given that I don’t even like this type of crossword theme, this is still probably top half of the Sundays we’ve seen in the past year. The WaPo by @Evan is consistently better than 75% of what we’re getting from the NYTX. I had to go back more than a month to find a Sunday I liked more than this. For awhile I thought I had stopped liking oversized grids. It turns out I just don’t like NYTX oversized grids (actually, none of the mainstream Sundays except for @Evan really does much for me - the indies have more freedom so I like their larger puzzles when they appear).

@Joe D - You’re on 🔥 today.






*Said recap for the curious (remember this is required reading) - Way back when 50-60 comments was typical. So 3 comments in a day was a sizable percentage. Also, the comments didn’t range as far, so after three comments you were probably beating a dead horse. Rex said “keep it to a max of three” and people complied. Then the Commentariat grew to where 70-90 comments was a typical day. Still people mostly complied but there were occasional transgressions. Rex would only chastise people if the dead horse beating caused the Dead Horse Preservation Society to email Rex. Then the comments starting regularly hitting 100+ everyday and people with three + comments became more of a regular thing. Rex still only chastised people if the Dead Horse Preservation Society emailed OR the Nasty Abolition Society (largely due to anonymice) emailed Rex. Then the nasty got so bad that the DHPS and NAS were emailing Rex too much so Rex instituted moderators. The moderators have posted the guidelines they got a few times and have commented on the lack of a post limit as well. There is no three post cap. There does seem to be a “Quit kicking that dead horse” rule and a “don’t be an insufferable jerk” rule (sufferable jerks, OTOH are allowed, it seems).

SharonAK 5:02 PM  

Almost the first commented referred to this as a "tribute" puzzle. Why????
I don't see the tribute at all. I just see the great pyramid being the theme.

I found some PPP difficult, and never like being referred to other clues.
But mostly it was fun and there were number of clever extras. Rex Mentioned "encrypt" clued for putting into code but situated right above the pyramid for the other meaning. And inside the pyramid is "chamber" where Khufu's sarcophagus is.

I'lve ben to the great pyramid but did not remember either of the names so that were a bit tough to suss.
We were all over the place culturally today. Having to understand Slpanich for the mujeres... Having to know or being taught something about Egypt, prehistoric southeast US culture ( Had trouble with that- wanted is to be Anastazi" which did not fit), Beetle's song for Sgt Pepper,dwarf planets (Oris which I did not know and am not remembering), math, animated movies, and more...

"I hate it" was a humorous surprise for "Ugh"

Nancy 5:10 PM  

Your body was probably sending you a message, @oldactor. It just didn't like being dead all that much.

BLS 5:18 PM  

Wow, you got wordle in 3 tries!
How'd you do that with that vowel problem?

Anonymous 5:19 PM  
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
kitshef 5:28 PM  

@thefogman. If you like quordle, you should try octordle. Eight words, thirteen guesses. For some reason, guesses above 10 appear like little clock faces.

Daily Octordle #62
🔟4️⃣
5️⃣🕚
7️⃣🕛
9️⃣8️⃣
octordle.com

egsforbreakfast 5:49 PM  

@Nancy 3:18 pm. Please, please don’t think I was scolding you. Just saying that ABRAM is not obscure to a crossworder like you. You are one of my favorite commenters and I would never scold you, but I would rib you when it seems deserved, as anyone should do to me.

stephanie 6:03 PM  

@Frantic Sloth lol! okay, i feel better now. had to come here because i had an error in the grid and i couldn't figure out what it was. i put EGYPT where KHUFU should be. reading rex's writeup where he had never heard this name either i thought, okay genius, so how'd you write it in with no crosses then? and then i read on...and realized...i too, was an idiot😆 i solve on the web too so i've no excuse there. i guess i've just been trained to ignore the little numbers in the squares since, because i solve on the web i don't really need them as the clues put your cursor where you're supposed to be. it makes sense that the entirety of EGYPT wouldn't be buried in a tomb, though. what's worse, when i googled CHEOPS earlier thinking, that's a thing i sort of remember, right? i got results all about "are KHUFU and CHEOPS the same person?" and yet... /facepalm

Big Easy 6:09 PM  

@JC66 - YES, two, one would be much better. Zero would be awesome. He is a very dedicated and effective, albeit a somewhat misguided troll, so occasionally there is some schadenfreude when he steps all over himself and sounds even sillier than usual.

I know that on most boards the common advice is “Do not feed the trolls”, but that was also the advice that I received about pigeons many years ago, and I have never been adversely effected by a pigeon. I love the fact that 99% of the regular posters here ignore it, and the one who he is trolling is leading the parade.

Nancy 6:09 PM  

Of course I knew you were teasing me, @egs, and my feelings are not bruised in the least. The middle names of minor POTUSes are just not things that linger in my mind for long, if at all, so I was just giving you advance notice that the whole thing could happen again -- and sooner than you think.

OTOH, maybe it won't. I do remember, for instance, that Elvis's middle name is "Aron" -- because it only has one "A". Strange the things that can jog my memory. One "A". Being "scolded" (LOL). So you never know.

stephanie 6:11 PM  

@SouthsideJohnny just fyi re: SENORAS - the clue was "women with husbands" - senora is like how we would use "mrs." to denote a married woman, as opposed to miss (women without husbands, or, senoritas).

Zerex 6:12 PM  
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Jeff Keller 6:15 PM  

I definitely had an edge on this one. I had the pleasure of visiting the Pyramids of Giza several years ago and took an excursion into the largest among them, the one in which Khufu/Cheops was entombed.

S.O. Crates 6:19 PM  
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
stephanie 6:24 PM  

@RooMonster i highly recommend viewing the mobile site on your computer (it should have ?m=1 at the end of the regular link) and that way you can read threaded comments without having to be on a mobile device. even when people tag others (which i agree is proper rex-world etiquette), once the comments start getting up there in number it's hard/impossible to recall what one is replying to without scrolling back up or ctrl+F. ymmv of course, but it has been really helpful for me.

stephanie 6:40 PM  

@Mike in Bed-Stuy i think there are two sets of people who come here to gripe. those of us that have no issue with the clue, but just want to vent/commiserate that it was out of our realm of knowledge (and see who else, if anyone, was on your wavelength thinking the same wrong answer(s) you guessed!), and those of us that feel certain things shouldn't appear in the puzzle at all. and some days we're in one group, and another day, the other. sometimes both at once. (tho i have nothing nice to say to the subset that feels rap, modern slang, etc has no place in the puzzle, no sir.)

i definitely prefer wordplay or vocabulary clues, just because you can solve many/most of them if you roll them around in your brain long enough. when it comes to PPP, either you know it or you don't. so that's not much fun for me. there's very rarely any satisfaction or forehead slapping moments with those clues, which are my favorite parts of a solving experience. i'm absolutely not opposed to PPP in the puzzle, and of course quite a bit of it you can guess at if you have enough crosses and it's a common enough proper noun (or even just a common name). and sometimes it's really fun when it hits in your wheelhouse - it always gives me a smile if i see a favorite band or song lyric or what have you.

suffice it to say, it's all very subjective, of course. there is a percentage that has been determined (i'm sorry, i always forget by who!) wherein, if the percentage of PPP clues skews above X%, then the level of gripe will be high and the comments will be quite polarized - a love it or hate it puzzle. because either you lucked out in familiarity with the PPP and it was a breeze, or you didn't and it was impossible/a slog/a google-fest.

Barbara S. 6:47 PM  

@oldactor (3:57 PM)
Your story reminded me of the tale (untrue, sadly) of Napoleon's mysterious experience in the Great Pyramid. Supposedly he had a life-altering vision in the King's Chamber which he refused to talk about, even on his deathbed. It's a story that has endured despite the facts.

Enjoyed the puzzle. It was completely wheelhouse for me -- Art History 101 stuff. Everybody likes the ancient Egyptians -- they're fun to learn, fun to teach, and KHUFU and I are old pals.

In spite of all the effort required to build that monumental structure, KHUFU didn't get to rest there for all eternity thanks to pesky tomb-robbers, who simply had no respect for megalomaniacs.

And, last thought, aren't the time scales of the ancient Egyptian period amazing -- Cleopatra would have looked upon the pyramids at Giza and marveled at their antiquity, built some 2500 years or so before her birth.

stephanie 6:48 PM  

@thefogman i do the quordle too, but i much prefer sedecordle:
Daily #42
0️⃣8️⃣⬛0️⃣4️⃣
2️⃣0️⃣⬛0️⃣6️⃣
1️⃣9️⃣⬛0️⃣7️⃣
1️⃣7️⃣⬛1️⃣8️⃣
2️⃣1️⃣⬛1️⃣6️⃣
1️⃣0️⃣⬛1️⃣5️⃣
1️⃣1️⃣⬛1️⃣4️⃣
1️⃣3️⃣⬛1️⃣2️⃣
sedecordle.com

or my new favorite, duotrigordle:
Daily Duotrigordle #25
Guesses: 34/37
3️⃣1️⃣ 0️⃣4️⃣ 0️⃣7️⃣ 0️⃣6️⃣
2️⃣9️⃣ 0️⃣8️⃣ 3️⃣0️⃣ 0️⃣5️⃣
0️⃣9️⃣ 1️⃣0️⃣ 1️⃣1️⃣ 1️⃣2️⃣
1️⃣4️⃣ 1️⃣3️⃣ 3️⃣3️⃣ 3️⃣2️⃣
1️⃣5️⃣ 1️⃣6️⃣ 1️⃣7️⃣ 1️⃣8️⃣
0️⃣3️⃣ 1️⃣9️⃣ 2️⃣0️⃣ 2️⃣1️⃣
2️⃣5️⃣ 2️⃣4️⃣ 2️⃣3️⃣ 2️⃣2️⃣
2️⃣8️⃣ 2️⃣7️⃣ 3️⃣4️⃣ 2️⃣6️⃣
https://duotrigordle.com/

JC66 6:53 PM  

@S.O. Crates

And I asked @!Anonymous @5:19 a legitimate question.






BTW, since I believe the Mods read the posts before approving, @Zed's answer to the question of post limits is probably correct.

Irishmaineiac 7:02 PM  

Touche!!!

Irishmaineiac 7:06 PM  

Exactly!

RooMonster 7:28 PM  

Hey everyone who always say "The Oscar was won in 2011, not 2010!"
Tonight is the Oscars. It is in the Year 2022 for movies that were in theaters in 2021. They are 2021 Oscars.
So in the future I don't want to hear you saying, "X movie won for 2022 Best Picture, not 2021!"
Got it?

Roo

A Moderator 7:29 PM  

Here’s what we got from Rex initially. There have been some amendments since. Emphasis added.

Protocol

Let’s keep this very, very simple.

Approve all comments you see, except

a. Obvious spam / totally off-topic stuff (you usually sniff this out in first few words of comment)
b. Abusive stuff

For “b” take a fairly narrow definition. Delete stuff that is clearly ad hominem and cruel and / or profane. Criticism of people / places / things is fine. It’s viciousness that we’re looking to eliminate.

Also, be much harder on comments about others than comments about me. All criticism of me, even mean stupid stuff, though profane stuff should go (doesn’t bother me, but it does others).

I generally select all and then just scan for bad stuff, which I deselect. Then approve good stuff (most comments). Then select all remaining bad stuff and delete it. I don’t read every word of every comment. Bad stuff announces itself pretty quickly.

Moderate as you see fit, whenever it occurs to you. Don’t think about it too hard. And dear lord don’t get into it w/ people ABOUT moderation in the comments. This is a never-ending cycle of pain. After a while, I will have you delete comments that simply complain about moderation, as they are pointless and navel-gazing.

OK, honestly, just refer to a. and b. above. Keep it simple.

stephanie 7:38 PM  

@RooMonster thank you! this is like 16th century being 1500s. i try my best, and i'm sure it's all easy and sense-making to most people, but i really need the reminder :)

A Moderator 7:38 PM  

We got the following later. Again, emphasis added.

I’m going to ask you all to be a little more stringent, if you would. There’s so much garbage over the last few days. The comment “Isn't this guy supposed to be good at puzzles?” for instance, is harmless in its way but also adds nothing. It’s just a stupid snark. Is it contributing to the discussion of the puzzle? OK. If not. Delete. Especially delete unconfirmed accounts with clearly hostile intent. Ruthlessly delete them. I’m getting complaints about the comments section again, which I haven’t since you all so graciously took over.

CDilly52 7:45 PM  

Good grief!!! KHUFU?!?!?! At least I figured it out in my last ditch attempt this evening. I refused to cheat because over all, I found this very easy. The theme I filled in Immediately after getting all of the NW answers lickety split. From there, it was a bit of a Sunday slog, until I discovered that this is a Sunday debut from a high school freshman! Color me chastened. Wow.

Despite the soeed with which I blew through most of the puzzle, I did nearly get Naticked at the FEIGNS/FEInts crossing THE BOR? Honestly, I never watched that much Star Trek - as in almost none (ok, ok, quit with the raspberries everyone). I have probably heard or even lut YHE BORG into a puzzle before, but with all the weird sci-fi out there, I thought it could just as easily be THE BORn because I read “fakes” as a noun ergo my answer FEIntS rather than fakes as a verb with FEIGNS. After about a half dozen switches back and forth, THE BORG won.

As for KHUFU, when Egypt and mummy didn’t work I figured the numbers must mean something (not so quick on the uptake today, but I’ve only been at this for 60 + years.

What a feat for one so young. Congratulations yo young Mr. Lee-Kovach. I’m impressed!

Mostly quiet reader 7:53 PM  

Thank you, moderators. You have the patience of LMS (that's the highest praise I can imagine.)

Z 8:11 PM  

@Stephanie - Dear God. And only five wrong guesses allowed! I think this is actually easier than octordle, which I fail at about 50% of the time.
Daily Duotrigordle #25
Guesses: 36/37
3️⃣6️⃣ 3️⃣5️⃣ 2️⃣2️⃣ 0️⃣5️⃣
0️⃣7️⃣ 0️⃣6️⃣ 3️⃣3️⃣ 3️⃣4️⃣
2️⃣3️⃣ 2️⃣4️⃣ 0️⃣4️⃣ 2️⃣5️⃣
2️⃣6️⃣ 2️⃣7️⃣ 3️⃣1️⃣ 3️⃣2️⃣
1️⃣9️⃣ 2️⃣8️⃣ 2️⃣0️⃣ 2️⃣1️⃣
1️⃣5️⃣ 1️⃣6️⃣ 1️⃣7️⃣ 1️⃣8️⃣
1️⃣2️⃣ 0️⃣8️⃣ 1️⃣4️⃣ 1️⃣3️⃣
1️⃣0️⃣ 0️⃣9️⃣ 2️⃣9️⃣ 3️⃣0️⃣
https://duotrigordle.com/

**wordle alert**
Yesterday’s epoxy was harder than today’s answer it seems, but the Twitter comments have been funny. My favorite was the suggestion that tomorrow’s word should be “naiad.” 🤣😂🤣

Anoa Bob 9:27 PM  

I agree that the puzzle was a clever feat of construction. The down side for me was a little too much short stuff, 3s and 4s, too much "glue" needed to hold it all together. Still an enjoyable solve.

oldactor @3:57 PM, ola vecino, my guess is that humidity may have been a major factor in your experience inside the tomb. Even though the humidity would normally be very low outside, there's no place for it to vent inside and would build up over time. The higher the humidity the lower the rate of evaporation and the faster sweat will accumulate, even in moderate temps. Wearing clothes made from synthetic fibers like polyester will also exacerbate sweat buildup. Living in hot climes has taught me these things.

sixtyni yogini 10:07 PM  

I will say I found it tedious but not because of the theme - loved 🥰 the theme!

Art history (and French) are just GREAT for some things - this puzz and crossword 🧩s in general!

So YT lucked out today. And so, of course I knew GREAT PYRAMID answers. However if it weren’t for theme- might never have finished. 😂 Useless majors … 😂 Not! 😂

🤸🏽‍♀️🤗🦖🦖🦖🦖🤗🤸🏽‍♀️

Anonymous 10:29 PM  

or could it be that all the software and wordlists and... means that a barrel of monkeys could make a xword. not to mention the plays of Shakespeare.

Anonymous 12:29 PM  

Didn't the NY Times stop letting us download their puzzles so that they could better format their online puzzles? If so, why do we keep getting puzzles like this that print incorrectly (missing/wrong numbers, missing magnet images, etc). Ugh.

thefogman 12:46 PM  

Thank you Stephanie and Kitshef!

CPG 1:54 PM  

Isn't Wordle "totally off-topic"?

Cyrus 2:23 PM  

For gosh sake. Do the puzzle as it's intended, in a print form. "Khufu"is "buried" in the sarcophagus in the pyramid, which forms a triangle above the closed off box. And the clues for "Khufu" are easy: they're just the letter numbers off the rest of the (pretty easy) grid.
The whole puzzlse was fun and challenging, and still felt like the work of a very smart 14 year old who is passionate about Egyptian lore. And nothing against Star Trek, or people who read Star Trek novels, but "Borg" is as arcane and silly a clue as any in the grid, and to single it out for praise is the move of a total nerd. (Says the nerd). Peace among

Jimi B. 2:31 PM  

This was my favorite puzzle of all time. It was wonderfully inventive. So interesting. I don't get what the haters are complaining about. Then again, I am an archaeologist. I always print the Sunday from the newspaper version because the squares are larger and the intro is included.

thefogman 2:52 PM  

To Stephanie: Sedecordle Win! First try. Like it…

Daily #43
0️⃣3️⃣⬛1️⃣5️⃣
0️⃣4️⃣⬛1️⃣8️⃣
1️⃣6️⃣⬛1️⃣9️⃣
0️⃣6️⃣⬛1️⃣4️⃣
0️⃣7️⃣⬛2️⃣0️⃣
0️⃣8️⃣⬛0️⃣9️⃣
1️⃣7️⃣⬛1️⃣0️⃣
1️⃣2️⃣⬛1️⃣1️⃣
sedecordle.com
#sedecordle

Gender Expert 2:55 PM  

Well elaborated. A fine artcle.

Case 2:46 PM  

I don't think you can blame the author for your own ignorance of basic world history

LBintheBK 5:10 PM  

he already has published at least one! check out sat Oct 9

Burma Shave 2:46 AM  

RARE TRUE STORY

OFTHE friends SALOME KEEPS,
IHATEIT that SHE said,
"NORMA's RENT-TO-OWN and SLEEPs
with COMRADES who are HALFREAD.

--- GERRY "GERI" YEOH

Diana, LIW 4:10 PM  

I didn't "get" the kingly trick, either. Meh. Not worth all the effort.

Diana, Lady-in-Waiting for Crosswords

spacecraft 9:13 PM  

So OFF was put off by not knowing KHUFU? Then how come I easily recognized the name? I would NEVER claim to out-scholar Mr. Sharp. Strange.

I enjoyed solving this one, despite a plethora of "THE"s. OFTHE, THEBORG, THEGREATPYRAMIDOFGIZA. I did notice, and like, the CHAMBER residing securely in the belly of the pyramid: nice. GERI--or indeed any of the Spice Girls--is decidedly DOD-worthy.

Given the theme density, we have a remarkably clean grid; no slog to it. This kid is really 14? How about those AAA batteries, looking like THREE PYRAMIDS. Ha, didn't notice TRHAT, did ya? Birdie.

Congrats to Scottie Scheffler, who may yet turn out to be the next Tiger. Right now it's his world, and the rest of the PGA is just living in it.

Unknown 4:52 PM  

This puzzle for me was a big FUKHU

Anonymous 2:13 PM  

Is it grid art?? Mr. KHUFU lies in eternal rest within his sarcophagus, festooned with a dwarf flag pole sticking out of it??

Anonymous 10:40 PM  
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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