Spaghetti (game)

Spaghetti is a game invented by Eric Berlin involving creating metapuzzles on the fly using a randomly selected set of "answers".

Background

The earliest recorded game of Spaghetti is found in a blog post by Eric Berlin celebrating National Spaghetti Day in 2019. In it, Eric challenged readers to "find the answer" to a set of five words (SWEEPSTAKES, JOBBER, NEUROTIC, INFANT, VASE), despite an insistence that they were chosen randomly and did not actually have an answer.

A common variation on the basic concept is the inclusion of "bonus" words that the setter had either "hidden" or "mistakenly left off" the initial list (at least according to the players), which can help people construct more elaborate solutions that would've been impossible either with the original number of answers or without a particular quality found in the bonus word.

Puzzle Applications

While Spaghetti may not have too many applications as a puzzle itself (within a hunt environment), it does have potential as a theme or narrative shell for a backsolving-related puzzle (as seen in the one notable example). As a functional antithesis to meta-matching (defined set of feeders with undefined final answer vs. undefined set of feeders with defined final answer), Spaghetti makes for an excellent exercise for solvers wanting to practice the mindset needed for both writing and solving metapuzzles, but lacks the definition needed to make a successful hunt puzzle on its own.

Notable Examples

  • Spaghetti Western (MITMH 2020) - Presented as a series of Spaghetti shells (all using the same four starter words), with the starter words and solutions missing, but a single "bonus word" added to each, which were clued at the beginning.
  • This Puzzle Will Unlock In... (CMU Spring 2022) - The six answers for this meta were each individually and independently chosen. Then, each pair of answers were used to feed into fifteen different minipuzzles.