Lots of challenging free game puzzles and riddles. Avoid getting a loan student credit for your mba degree online ;o)

www.mindbreakers.com

Since 1995 free Puzzles, Riddles, Brainteasers, Quizes and Games. Test your IQ with Users can send AND receive faxes via their email account as well as choose where they want their numbermagic trivia. Fun online collection, some with visual illusion and some jokes as well. Solve the brain teasers with math logic. No crossword or jigsaw puzzles.

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Free Webster's 2005 on CD-ROM
. . Fun stuff
* * * * NASA fraud - Fake moon landing
* * * * Useless japanese inventions
Cool IQ File
* * * * * * * It's impossible !
* * * * * * * Just draw a line...
* * * * * * * * Turn on a lightbulb
* * * * * * * the Wizard and three men
* * * * * How to keep an idiot busy...
* * * * * * * Gameshow
* * * * * Mystery item
* * * * * USD 29
* * * * * The truth or a lie ?
* * * * * 4 people cross a river [a]
* * * * * Smoking [a]
* * * * Balloon in a car [a]
* * * * A false coin [a]
* * * * Fox, chicken and grain [a]
* * * Penny turns into a dollar [a]
* * * * Lock on a box [a]
* * * * Party of five couples [a]
* * Mirror
* * A Camelrace [a]
* * Monkey [a]
* * Cannonball in a boat [a]
* * * 15th square [a]
* * the third -gry word [a]
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. . Links
Links to other puzzle and riddle sites

TV Guide Crosswords & PuzzlesGet FREE CD-ROM on TV Guide Crosswords & Puzzles - Test your knowledge of the entertainment world with TV Guide Multimedia Crosswords & Puzzles. Over 30 custom-designed puzzles with more then 1,500 multimedia clues. These puzzles provide hours of multimedia entertainment for both trivia buffs, crossword lovers.

Math Invaders Get FREE CD-ROM Math Invaders challenges with compelling 3D game play, word problems and computations. It provides an exciting game environment where kids not only improve their math skills, but also retain what they've learned. It teaches Basic Algebra, Basic Geometry, Addition & Subtraction, Multiplication & Division and more.


[a] = currently a mind breaker file may be temporarely
located on web.archive.org. the file is still working
and I am still busy copying it to this server...



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A puzzle is a problem or enigma presented as entertainment; that is written down, acted out, etc. Many puzzles stem from serious mathematical or logistical problems (see packing problems and tour puzzles). Others (like chess problems) are derived from board games. Others again have been devised for the purpose of being brain teasers.

The history of puzzles goes back thousands of years, Tangram being one of the earliest and still one of the most popular puzzles. In certain temples of Japan monks used to write mathematical puzzles on temple walls.

A riddle is a puzzle, consisting of text with a question to answer. Riddles have a distinguished literary ancestry, although the contemporary sort of conundrum that passes under the name of "riddle" may not make this obvious. Riddles occur extensively in Old English poetry, and also in the Old Norse literature of the Elder Edda and the skalds. A manuscript in Old English, The Exeter Book, preserves almost sixty versified riddles from the Old English literature.

A general technique is to obliquely refer to the subject by kenning and other sorts of figurative language; since kennings formed such an important element of alliterative verse forms in the Germanic languages, the riddles served the dual purpose of puzzling the poet's audience and teaching the lore needed to successfully use or understand the poetic language. The god Odin was a master of riddle lore, and sparred with several of his foes using contests of riddles. In the Vafthruthnismal, Odin defeats his foe by posing a question only he could possibly know the answer to.

In Hebrew Bible, the hero Samson proposes a riddle to the Philistines, which centered around Samson's discovery of honey in the carcass of a lion. (Judges 14) In Greek mythology, riddles were the province of the Sphinx, a female monster who challenged passersby with riddles; those who failed to guess them were devoured. She famously asked Oedipus, "What is the animal that goes about on four legs in the morning, on two legs at noon, and on three in the evening?" The correct answer given by Oedipus was "Man," who crawls as a baby, walks upright as an adult, and goes with the help of a walking stick when elderly.

In J. R. R. Tolkien's The Hobbit, Gollum challenges Bilbo Baggins to a riddle competition; Bilbo wins the competition by asking Gollum, "What have I got in my pocket?", which Gollum could not answer. The answer, of course, was the One Ring, which Gollum had lost and Bilbo had since found.

In the Batman comic books, one of the hero's best known enemies is The Riddler who is personally compelled to supply clues about his upcoming crimes to his enemies in the form of riddles and puzzles. Stereotypically, they are the kind of simple riddles as described below, but modern treatments generally prefer to have the character use more sophisticated puzzles.

Contemporary riddles typically use puns and double entendres for humorous effect, rather than to puzzle the butt of the joke.