@Bird Lives I agree. This one reminds me of the "Word for Word" on 12/23/2022, though it has its differences. That puzzle had 26 pangrammatic, 1-word clues, and you had to identify a subset and look at the first letters of the answers to those clues (in reverse order). In an astounding feat of construction, Matt also made the answers pangrammatic 1-word answers. Quite impressive! But also unnecessary to figuring out the answer to the meta. It was a little distracting for me, though I was able to get the answer. I kept thinking I had a cypher and needed to decode other answers. Fortunately, there was nothing obvious to decode. But for "Consider the Alternative," I can see why people would work back to the original clue-answers. It's a classic metanism, finding links to other clues/answers and using their initial letters.Bird Lives wrote: ↑Tue Aug 15, 2023 1:54 pmThanks for the lead. I almost never remember to look at Fiend. Over there, Matt says,
The original answers to these eight clues (EINE, AURORA, FONDUE, ATOM, DAD, HERON, BORO, RAY) . . . were 100% necessary,
But in his next comment he says,
I realized that someone might just spot the eight OR- words and score right away,
Not to be picky and all, but if you can score right away without noticing the original eight answers, then those answers are not necessary. That is, they are not necessary to the solution. They are, however, necessary to a full appreciation of the puzzle.
Thank goodness I wasn't perceptive enough to get that far in the process!
@rjy, I appreciate your laying out how it works thematically. That makes perfect sense. That was something I missed about the title to the WSJ meta this past week, "Think Different." As others pointed out over there, understanding the meaning behind it would have helped me solve. I thought it wasn't helpful enough. Turns out I just didn't get it. Had I realized Steve Jobs meant it to be read similar to "Think: Victory!" or "Think: Beauty," I might have done better.