Twisted Logic
folder
Original - Misc › Humour
Rating:
Adult
Chapters:
5
Views:
1,264
Reviews:
2
Recommended:
0
Currently Reading:
0
Category:
Original - Misc › Humour
Rating:
Adult
Chapters:
5
Views:
1,264
Reviews:
2
Recommended:
0
Currently Reading:
0
Disclaimer:
These stories and puzzles are works of fiction and no resemblance to real people or events are intended. No money is made from their presentation on this site.
Introduction
The following pages contain puzzles, set up as stories; naughty stories at that! To solve these puzzles you'll need to read the clues carefully and sort out who has done what in each situation. Don't worry, answers are included on the page after each puzzle. You don't need any specialist knowledge to solve any of them either, just logical deduction, and maybe a pencil and paper.
Each puzzle can be solved by working out what pieces of information belong together in a set. Each piece of the puzzle can only be in one set, so once you've found out what it goes with, you can rule it out as belonging with other sets. Also, each set only contains one piece of each sort of information.
For example, a puzzle might ask you to work out who from a list of people went to one of a list of locations, and what they did there. You'd have a list of people's names, a list of locations and a list of activities, and would have to work out what name, location and activity went together.
If you like these puzzles and aren't too worried about whether or not they are porny, this site has lots of them; http://www.puzzlersparadise.com/page1034.html
You can kill a lot of time on there. Also, the grid arrangement that they use is very handy. You might find it useful in solving my versions too.
On a creative note, I decided to keep these risqué and suggestive, rather than overtly smutty, I hope that won't spoil your enjoyment of them.
I have a great love for British detective fiction of the 1920s – 1940s, and so have used a lot of the standards of those kind of crime novels (country houses, society scandals, gentlemen's clubs, and so forth) for these stories. Points to anyone who spots references to specific books or characters :D
I hope you enjoy them.
DG
Each puzzle can be solved by working out what pieces of information belong together in a set. Each piece of the puzzle can only be in one set, so once you've found out what it goes with, you can rule it out as belonging with other sets. Also, each set only contains one piece of each sort of information.
For example, a puzzle might ask you to work out who from a list of people went to one of a list of locations, and what they did there. You'd have a list of people's names, a list of locations and a list of activities, and would have to work out what name, location and activity went together.
If you like these puzzles and aren't too worried about whether or not they are porny, this site has lots of them; http://www.puzzlersparadise.com/page1034.html
You can kill a lot of time on there. Also, the grid arrangement that they use is very handy. You might find it useful in solving my versions too.
On a creative note, I decided to keep these risqué and suggestive, rather than overtly smutty, I hope that won't spoil your enjoyment of them.
I have a great love for British detective fiction of the 1920s – 1940s, and so have used a lot of the standards of those kind of crime novels (country houses, society scandals, gentlemen's clubs, and so forth) for these stories. Points to anyone who spots references to specific books or characters :D
I hope you enjoy them.
DG