Professor Layton Roulette Puzzle

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Professor Layton Roulette Puzzle Rating: 5,0/5 8703 reviews

Professor Layton and the Curious Village Summary: In the curious village of St. Mystere, townsfolk speak to each other in riddles, lock their doors with sliding puzzles and hide their secrets. Ferris Wheel Riddle is a puzzle in Professor Layton and the Curious Village. Ohohohoho, is the great Professor Layton stuck on a puzzle? Don't worry, we won't tell anyone. A quick peek at this guide should get you on your merry way through London present and future. Puzzle 023 in Professor Layton and the Curious Village is called 'Juice Pitchers'. Measure carefully as you do this puzzle! Read the puzzles' description. This is the fifty-ninth puzzle you'll encounter in Layton's Mystery Journey: Katrielle and the Millionaires' Conspiracy. To access this puzzle, you must investigate the grandfather clock. To complete the puzzle, you must determine how many minutes it would take for the sand in both timers to reach the bottom.

If you never like to leave a puzzle unsolved, you're in for a treat with the new Layton's Mystery Journey.

(via Level-5)

While past Layton mysteries have appeared only on Nintendo's DS and 3DS systems, this new adventure, consisting of 50 unique puzzles, all takes place online.

The story begins when a mysterious device called the Abstraction Contraption arrives at the Layton Detective Agency. It's said to make anyone who opens it disappear, and people around the globe have vanished trying to unravel its secrets.

(via Level-5)

The box was sent with the intention that Professor Layton would solve the mystery, but he's nowhere to be found, so his daughter Katrielle decides to take matters into her own hands. She learns that if she can solve 50 puzzles located all around the world, she'll be able to gain a great power locked within the contraption. Thinking on her feet, Kat enlists the help of puzzle-solvers on the internet (that's us!) to find these global puzzles and solve its riddles.

As in any Layton game, the puzzles here are the star of the show. Three puzzles are currently live, without 47 more rolling out between now and September to test our wits.

If you've played Professor Layton titles before, you know that its puzzles force you to use your brain, occasionally thinking way outside the box to solve them. If you haven't , you may have a tough time deducing the answers at first.

You'll find that the game's puzzles might occasionally reference popular culture. The very first one features the 'Pen Pineapple Apple Pen' guy. As weird as it is, his puzzle combines his viral video's style with a brain teaser that actually makes for a great Layton puzzle.

Don't get it immediately? You've got to look at the individual step and break down what each one does. How does the apple affect 'rap'? What does the pineapple do to the word 'trap'? Once you've done that, you apply both to the final word to get your answer.

While the third puzzle is a more straightforward, classic puzzle, the second is a doozy—and my favorite so far. At first, this puzzle absolutely mystified me. What in the world was I supposed to do with each of these grids?

Professor Layton Roulette Puzzle Solutions

(via Level-5)

Then, I realized that the page included links to 15 web pages. All of them were in Japanese, making navigation tricky, but with the exception of two of the links, I was able to find something they each had in common. Taking advantage of that commonality, I was able to fill in the majority of the grid.

This is where the online feature of the game comes in handy. People all over the world are working together with you to solve these puzzles in various languages, and are all cooperating to figure stuff out. Somehow, people online had located the two puzzles I was missing so I could fill in the rest of my grid.

Best of all, it feels like no one is spoiling the puzzles. Even with this help I still had to do the mini puzzles myself to finish the grid, and even at that point I still had to decode a cipher, figure out what it meant and color in certain parts of the grid to get my correct answer (after a couple of failed attempts).

(via Level-5)

Like in other Layton games, solving puzzles grants you points called Picarats. If you solve puzzles quickly, you can get bonus Picarats, but if you submit incorrect guesses, the number of Picarats you'll earn when you eventually solve the puzzle will decrease. All players are ranked by their Picarat totals, and thanks to my fumbles I'm currently ranked at No. 540 in the world.

It also appears that more of the story will be unlocked as the puzzles are solved, with 16 chapters to the story in total. I hope that as it progresses we'll discover more about the contraption, as well as where Kat's dad has disappeared.

As you solve puzzles, you also earn roulette tickets, which are used at a roulette wheel for a chance to collect items. What's cool about these items is when the next Layton game releases, you'll be able to transfer them to the game.

(via Level-5)

U.S. fans will be able to play Layton's Mystery Journey: Katrielle and the Millionaire's Conspiracy when it's available on Android and iOS devices on July 20, and sometime later this year on the Nintendo 3DS. We'll definitely be biding our time with the current puzzle adventure until that can happen. You can join in on the adventure yourself HERE.

Layton

If you love the Professor Layton games, we bet you'll like Phoenix Wright, too. Click HERE to check out our review of the latest game, Spirit of Justice.

The Story

The tale begins as Professor Layton, a true English gentleman and famous archeologist, drives to the remote settlement of St. Mystere with his apprentice, Luke, in response to a request from the widow of a wealthy baron. The baron’s will indicates that the family treasure, the Golden Apple, is hidden somewhere within the village, and whoever finds it will inherit the whole of the Reinhold Estate. The Professor and Luke must search the town for clues leading to the precious heirloom.

All your favorite puzzles, now powered up in HD!

Akira Tago

With puzzles created by Akira Tago, author of the “Atama no Taisou” (lit. “Head Gymnastics”) books, Professor Layton and the Curious Village brings together more than 100 brain teasers including slide puzzles, matchstick puzzles, and even trick questions to flex players’ observation, logic, and critical thinking skills.

New! Exclusive, never-before-seen animated cutscenes

Professor Layton Roulette Puzzle Online

Enjoy new footage
as you play through the game,

Professor Layton Roulette Puzzle Game

all beautifully rendered in HD!