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4 people found the following review helpful:
As it says on the tin, August 25, 2019A one-room puzzle with a single puzzle, but a rather interesting one. I liked the mechanic. Took less time to solve than I thought it would when I got into it. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Remove vote | Add a comment
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5 people found the following review helpful:
A hunt the pixel game transformed into counting, February 10, 2016by MathBrush In this game, there are 69,105 keys, only one of which will open the door. The key you need is the only unique key. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Remove vote | Add a comment
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3 people found the following review helpful:
Fun exercise for the player and writer. Warning: math nitpicking follows!, January 20, 2015by Andrew Schultz (Chicago) I found myself coming back to this game more often than I thought. The author intended it as somewhat of an exercise, so I don't feel right rating it, so I'll list what it's done for me: Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Remove vote | Add a comment
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5 people found the following review helpful:
The amusing mode and quick win, September 13, 2013by masema (Spoiler - click to show)the amusing mode is found by entering fuc& in the game. the quick win is to x the keys until you have the brand names. count all the names. the one with 255 keys is the kind you need. then count the scratched keys of that kind. that should give you what you need. the rest is unneccesary Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Remove vote | Add a comment
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3 people found the following review helpful:
Little nice puzzle, January 7, 2013by jd One-room puzzle. You'll need some time, a sheet of paper, a pen. Nothing more! Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Remove vote | Add a comment
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8 people found the following review helpful:
69,105 and almost all of them alike, November 26, 2011by Joey Jones (UK) I was all primed up for a logic puzzle. What I was faced with is a puzzle that (unless you know something I don't) logically only lends itself to brute force solutions. Logically, there was no reason why (Spoiler - click to show)the key had to be a key with the smallest of each of the properties, instead the game was about recognising a very simple (Spoiler - click to show)pattern in the distribution of the keys. I didn't expect much and so I wasn't too disappointed. The game was an interesting experiment and I'm pleased it exists. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Remove vote | View comments (4) - Add comment
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8 people found the following review helpful:
Fun, little diversion!, July 30, 2011by John Daily (New York) I have to admit: I'd rather work on a logic problem than just about any other type of puzzle. Because of this, I quite enjoyed 69,105. There's no real plot, no sense of tension, but that's not the point. All there is, is you in a locked room with 69,105 keys, all with seven characteristics. Only one is unique, and you must find it. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Remove vote | Add a comment
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7 people found the following review helpful:
Quick and cute logic puzzle, December 19, 2010by Bernie (Fredericksburg, VA) Normally I don't give such a simple and short game 4 stars, but the logic behind the single, unique puzzle was perfect. As the game's description says, you are stuck in a room with 69,105 keys. If you can find the one unique key, you win. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Remove vote | Add a comment
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10 people found the following review helpful:
Escape the room- again?, April 7, 2010by tggdan3 (Michigan) There are a lot of one-room escape the room games out there, where your only goal is to get past one (or a few) puzzles to get into the next room. Suveh Nux or Enlightenment are good examples, with a series of flash ones available all over the internet. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Remove vote | Add a comment
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17 people found the following review helpful:
Parsing excercise, September 14, 2009by Victor Gijsbers (The Netherlands) David Welbourn's 69,105 keys is not so much a game as it is a parsing excercise presented as a short and well-polished puzzle. You have to find the one unique key in the room, using commands such as "count green round bronze unscratched Acme keys". Tedious rather than fun, but technically impressive. The source code is also provided, so that you can learn from it. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Remove vote | Add a comment
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