[Solution] Triple Rhyme Time

Each of the clue phrases leads to a set of three words, all of which rhyme. This puzzle is based on the Jeopardy category of the same name.

  • A gaming stream’s connection desire. -> Twitch Hitch Itch
  • An Alaskan garden statue’s froth. -> Nome Gnome Foam
  • Cry of excitement upon seeing 1/100 of a Vietnamese dong as the price of ratatouille. -> Ooh! Xu Stew
  • Spooky and exhausted digital assistant. -> Eerie Weary Siri
  • A single sister rotated. -> One Nun Spun
  • Secures the bovine strolls. -> Locks Ox Walks
  • Archaeologist Indiana has AirPods. -> Jones Owns Earphones
  • Proudly spoken pavement poem. -> Crowed Road Ode
  • An alabaster location after dark. -> White Site Night
  • A strange grass-covered garment worn by ancient Jewish priests. -> Odd Sod Ephod

Reading the first letters of these triplets in the order they are clued gives the phrase THING FOX SEWS ON SLOW JOE CROW’S NOSE. This is a reference to the rhyming book Fox in Socks, which contains the sentence “Fox sews hose on Slow Joe Crow’s nose.” The answer is HOSE.

[Solution] Toe Touches

This is a word ladder from HAND to FOOT, but the clues are out of order. Each word differs by one letter from the previous word. The full ladder – including the clues which lead to each word – looks like this:

  • HAND
  • HIND – Rear, as a leg
  • WIND – Air current
  • WILD – Not tame
  • WELD – Connect metal using heat
  • MELD – Combine, often referring to sets of cards
  • MELT – Become liquid
  • FELT – Cloth made of pressed wool
  • FEST – Big party, for short
  • ???? – The answer to this puzzle
  • MIST – Fine spray or light rain
  • MAST – Vertical pole on a boat
  • MASH – Alan Alda show
  • MOSH – Dance violently
  • GOSH – Golly!
  • POSH – Swanky or luxurious
  • POST – Opposite of pre-
  • PORT – City with a harbor
  • FORT____ Sumter
  • FOOT

The only two four-letter combinations that can link FEST and MIST are FIST and MEST. Of those, FIST is the real word – and the answer to the puzzle.

[Solution] Secret Agent Recruitment

The first step in solving this puzzle lies in noticing the abundance of words from the NATO phonetic alphabet. In order, those words are Whiskey Oscar Romeo Delta Sierra Papa Echo Romeo Sierra Echo November Tango Echo November Charlie Echo, which spell out the phrase WORDS PER SENTENCE.

Counting the number of words in each sentence gives 1, 14 19, 23, 5, 18, 3, 15, 22, 5, 18, 20. With A=1, B=2, etc., this translates to ANSWER COVERT. The answer is COVERT.

[Solution] What a Card

Each of the clues leads to a phrase beginning with the name of a card, given in order from ace to king:

  • Jim Carrey role: ACE Ventura
  • Opinion: TWO cents
  • Nursery rhyme characters: THREE blind mice
  • Schoolyard game: FOUR square
  • Chinese seasoning: FIVE spice
  • Amusement park: SIX Flags
  • What you might sail: SEVEN seas
  • Beatles hit: EIGHT Days a Week
  • What a cat has allegedly: NINE lives
  • Religious rules: TEN Commandments
  • Personification of winter: JACK Frost
  • Rapper and actress: QUEEN Latifah
  • The Jungle Book character: KING Louie

The cards given with each clue are the length of the answers, not counting the card names. This allows solvers to create a cipher key based on the answers. For example, the first row of cards spells out VENTURA, so the ace of diamonds must represent V, the two of clubs is E, etc.

Applying this cipher to the unclued cards at the bottom spells out the phrase A TWO SLANGILY. A slang term for two, used most commonly when referring to cards, is DEUCE.

[Solution] Missing Vowels

Each of the rows is missing all of its vowels. Once the words are reconstituted, they look like this:

  • Star Wars Characters:
  • PRINCESS LEIA ORGANA (11)
  • COUNT DOOKU (6)
  • ADMIRAL ACKBAR (7)
  • Classic Board Games:
  • THE GAME OF LIFE (11)
  • SNAKES AND LADDERS (4)
  • BATTLESHIP (6)
  • Fictional Trains:
  • THOMAS THE TANK ENGINE (10)
  • THE POLAR EXPRESS (5)
  • HOGWARTS EXPRESS (4)
  • School Subjects:
  • ENGLISH (7)
  • MATHEMATICS (7)
  • EARTH SCIENCE (4)
  • US States:
  • OKLAHOMA (4)
  • NEVADA (3)
  • OHIO (1)
  • Pokemon:
  • MEWTWO (5)
  • EEVEE (4)
  • ALAKAZAM (2)
  • Animals:
  • SPIDER (2)
  • HORSESHOE CRAB (12)
  • SIBERIAN TIGER (9)

Indexing into each of the full answers by the given numbers reveals the phrase I’d like to what a vowel, Pat. This is a reference to a commonly spoken phrase on Wheel of Fortune, where contestants must buy vowels. The answer is BUY.

[Solution] The Long and Short of It

This puzzle consists of seven very simple mazes, each with a single yellow line through it. Solving the mazes and paying special attention to where the path intersects with that line gives the following:

The flavor text of the the puzzle references both Samuel and telegraph, suggesting that Morse code is necessary to get the answer. Reading the path/yellow line overlaps as dots and dashes gives . ... -.-. .- .--. . ... which translates to ESCAPES, the answer to the puzzle.

[Solution] Binary Logic

Each of the words can be preceded by either TRUE or FALSE to make a common phrase. (In certain cases, the reverse can also be a phrase, but it is always quite rare.):

  • FALSE PRETENSES
  • TRUE BLOOD
  • FALSE EQUIVALENCE
  • FALSE WITNESS
  • FALSE EYELASHES
  • TRUE BLUE
  • TRUE DEER
  • TRUE TO FORM
  • FALSE ACCUSATION
  • TRUE CRIME
  • TRUE COLORS
  • TRUE BELIEVER
  • FALSE BOTTOM
  • FALSE FLAG
  • TRUE BUGS
  • FALSE PROPHET
  • FALSE IMPRISONMENT
  • TRUE STORY
  • TRUE TO LIFE
  • FALSE DICHOTOMY
  • TRUE DETECTIVE
  • FALSE TEETH
  • FALSE ADVERTISING
  • TRUE VALUE
  • FALSE ALARM
  • TRUE NORTH
  • TRUE TYPE
  • TRUE O’BRIEN
  • FALSE START
  • TRUE ENOUGH
  • FALSE POSITIVE
  • FALSE COGNATE

Converting these True/False answers to binary (TRUE=1, FALSE=0) gives 01000111 01110010 01101001 01110100. The flavor text clues ASCII which can turn eight-bit binary numbers into characters. Translating these four numbers gives Grit. The answer is GRIT.

[Solution] Spatial Relationships

This metapuzzle consists of the following image, along with the answers to the feeder puzzles: MOZART SYMPHONY, YOU ARE HERE, FIFTH GEN CONSOLE, CANDY BAR, OBERON, TRIDENT, THERMOMETER, and CARNIVOROUS PLANT.

This image suggests the planets of our solar system, moving outward. Each answer corresponds to one of the planets:

  • Mercury = THERMOMETER (Thermometers are traditionally filled with mercury.)
  • Venus = CARNIVOROUS PLANT (Venus flytrap)
  • Earth = YOU ARE HERE (Unless any aliens are solving these puzzles, in which case, welcome!)
  • Mars = CANDY BAR (Mars bar)
  • Jupiter = MOZART SYMPHONY (Mozart Symphony No. 41 is named Jupiter.)
  • Saturn = FIFTH GEN CONSOLE (the Sega Saturn)
  • Uranus = OBERON (Oberon is a moon of Uranus.)
  • Neptune = TRIDENT (The god Neptune wields a trident.)

Indexing into each answer by the number written on the planet spells out the solution, MOONSHOT (or MOON SHOT), referring to an ambitious, groundbreaking effort, such as the 1969 moon landing.