![we were here together grid puzzle we were here together grid puzzle](https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-Obk4O8Ji2gU/W_hS75FXW0I/AAAAAAAACLk/7xdwgbBd8agWBJ5PSfjR2cjK0G0GdMxDwCLcBGAs/s1600/puzzle-grid.png)
![we were here together grid puzzle we were here together grid puzzle](https://dwblog.melissaanddoug.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/free-printable-picture-mix-up-pieces.jpg)
The 0 in the fourth column then gives us an extra P there. The second row has three KPKs and there is only one way to achieve this. From there, the eighth column falls out and we get the following, Hence, the sixth element is P and the second is K. If the sixth element is K, then the second element is P and we can only fit two PKPs. Furthermore, either the second or sixth element must be a K (to allow three PKPs), but not both (since there is only one KPK).
![we were here together grid puzzle we were here together grid puzzle](http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Y8dj9YqcNvE/UIFKAa1ZV6I/AAAAAAAAAJY/ag7e_1gcJMU/s1600/Screen+shot+2012-10-19+at+7.21.43+AM.png)
Now look at the eighth column and notice that if we are to fit in three 'PKP's then the fifth element cannot be K, and so must be a P. The only way we could have a 'PKP' here without a 'KPK' is if it were bookended by Ps and this can only happen in one place. We can fill in some more letters close to the Ks and Ps here. Now look at the rows and columns with digit '0'. These can only be filled in with letters alternating Make sure to let us know "Thanks, I hate it" in the comments and on Twitter! Also, here's a puppy.First we focus on the rows and columns with digit '4'. And without a deadline, we managed to squash some late-arising dupes and a couple gluey entries with a helper square that ONLY made us rejigger the literal central core of the grid. But hopefully the end result is better because we took our time! We split responsibilities on filling the (over-sized) grid and on cluing, so the end result should be a pretty good blend of our styles. For an idea of the timeline, we had a themer set within hours, a grid for the themers within days, and then *checks notes* 8 months to fill the grid?! Okay, it's possible we put this one on the back-back-back-back-burner. The idea for this one got bounced around a year and a half ago. (1/n) /0ewNRJloLu- Scott Barolo September 3, 2018 and I (a woman & a man in science) have attempted to catalog those replies, to save us all the trouble of writing new responses every time. #WomeninSTEM get a lot of “Reply Guys” who repeat the same unhelpful comments. But I'm glad we were able to add to the current trend of puzzles that started as fun, dumb ideas on Crossword Twitter, where a crowdsource or joke can quickly turn into a surprisingly legit joint for The Blogs(TM). The name of today's puzzle, "Reply Guys," is obviously taken from our fledgling tag team wrestling duo. This crassword puzzle has been rated PG-13 for strong language, solver discretion is advised.
#We were here together grid puzzle pdf#
Please free to pick multiple poisons, and tell me about it here or on Twitter Try It - PDF
![we were here together grid puzzle we were here together grid puzzle](https://storage.googleapis.com/static.mathigon.org/tasks/6f6dfb48a644c9a890b3605672f3c40f.jpg)
The paper copies had Just Try It on the front as a totally new puzzle, and a bonus puzzle on the back: either Cutting Corners, a tricky Thursday-ish puzzle posted last August, or Let's Roll, a light Tuesday-ish puzzle with a theme that makes me smile from August 2020. It's a theme I'd been thinking about for months, and I figured it would only make any sense to diehard crossword fans, so ACPT was a great motivator to get it done. Proud of this goofy crassword puzzle I left on the ACPT giveaway table. But still ended up at 79th place, around the same relative ranking as my 119th from 2019, so a great result and I'm happy.Ĭrassword- New New York Times February 17, 2021 I might even have taken a correct entry out? If I'd managed to finish puzzle 5, I think I'd have beaten my very nice placement of 69th in 2018-still my only ever perfect record. Saw that I had 9 minutes left with just one corner to go-"Great, plenty of time!" Suddenly it was over and I'd made no additional progress. NO RAGRETSĬlean puzzles 1-4 & 6-7, and got nearly all of puzzle 5 done. It was also exhausting, and some of us were making truly terrible decisions, like waking up at 3am Friday morning to clue a puzzle until 6am staying up until 2:30am Saturday morning and ordering McDonalds to the hotel on Uber Eats and closing down the lobby at 3am Sunday when Puzzle 7 starts at 9. Seeing so many old, new, and remote friends at ACPT last weekend was amazing, and hopefully you all know how great it was to see you already, because I am not even going to try and list you all. Hi Crossworders (and Matt Gritzmacher's link-crawling bot)!