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Next, one can note that the numbers within any given moat compose a sequence from 1 to N. Assembling the letters in this order spells the name of a naval captain—in the first moat, this is JACK T COLTON, captain of the Angelina.
Next, one can note that the numbers within any given moat compose a sequence from 1 to N. Assembling the letters in this order spells the name of a naval captain—in the first moat, this is JACK T COLTON, captain of the Angelina.


As it turns out, every naval captain in the puzzle runs a boat with a name eight letters long—exactly the number of pieces in each moat. Each moat piece also has a space underneat the boat for a single letter. The boat pictures in the puzzle sail clockwise, so the name should also be entered clockwise using the pre-placed pieces as guidelines.
As it turns out, every naval captain in the puzzle runs a boat with a name eight letters long—exactly the number of pieces in each moat. Each moat piece also has a space underneath the boat for a single letter. The boat pictures in the puzzle sail clockwise, so the name should also be entered clockwise using the pre-placed pieces as guidelines.


One can now turn to the central turret in each moat, and note that the letters spell out the word SIGNAL; in addition, the captain's arms are each marked with a lowercase Roman numeral, and each piece in the moat is associated with a cardinal or ordinal direction. This is a clue that semaphore is important to the puzzle. In fact, by arranging the captain's arms to form the letter on the turret in semaphore, one can associate each Roman numeral with a letter from the ship's name. For example, the letter S points west and southeast; the letters pointed to are A and L, respectively, which associate to the numerals ii and vi. Noting that the Roman numerals also run a sequence from i to xii, one can arrange the letters in this order for the final answer.}}
One can now turn to the central turret in each moat, and note that the letters spell out the word SIGNAL; in addition, the captain's arms are each marked with a lowercase Roman numeral, and each piece in the moat is associated with a cardinal or ordinal direction. This is a clue that semaphore is important to the puzzle. In fact, by arranging the captain's arms to form the letter on the turret in semaphore, one can associate each Roman numeral with a letter from the ship's name. For example, the letter S points west and southeast; the letters pointed to are A and L, respectively, which associate to the numerals ii and vi. Noting that the Roman numerals also run a sequence from i to xii, one can arrange the letters in this order for the final answer.}}
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[[Shared Characteristics]] - A key part of this puzzle is finding two occupations that can be described by the same sentence, often with creative interpretation of the words.
[[Shared Characteristics]] - A key part of this puzzle is finding two occupations that can be described by the same sentence, often with creative interpretation of the words.
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{{DISPLAYTITLE: Moat-er Boats (2020 MIT Mystery Hunt)}}
{{DEFAULTSORT: Moat-er Boats (MIT Mystery Hunt 2020)}}

Revision as of 12:47, 27 February 2022

Moat-er Boats
MIT Mystery Hunt (2020)
The Grand Castle
The puzzle's icon, a kiosk presumably renting boats for the castle's moat.
Author(s)Todd Etter, Brent Holman, Chris Harris
Statistics
No. solves105
No. total guesses189
Links
PuzzleLink
SolutionLink


Moat-er Boats is a word and lateral-thinking puzzle from the Grand Castle round of the 2020 MIT Mystery Hunt. It revolves around creating chains of types of people (crew members) by linking them together using shared characteristics (boats), ultimately building circular "moats" around central towers.

Solve Path

Final Answer: Click to revealRACHEL CARSON.

Puzzle Elements