Skewb

The Skewb (/ˈskjuːb/) is a combination puzzle and a mechanical puzzle similar to the Rubik's Cube. It was invented by Tony Durham and marketed by Uwe Mèffert.[1] Although it is cubical, it differs from the typical cubes' construction; its axes of rotation pass through the corners of the cube, rather than the centers of the faces. There are four axes, one for each space diagonal of the cube. As a result, it is a deep-cut puzzle in which each twist affects all six faces.

Mèffert's original name for this puzzle was the Pyraminx Cube, to emphasize that it was part of a series including his first tetrahedral puzzle, the Pyraminx. The name Skewb was coined by Douglas Hofstadter in his Metamagical Themas column. Mèffert liked the new name enough to apply it to the Pyraminx Cube, and he also named some of his other puzzles after it, such as the Skewb Diamond.[2]

In December 2013, the Skewb was recognized as an official World Cube Association competition event.[3]

Mechanism

The Skewb's pieces are divided into subgroups and have several constraints. The eight corners are split into two group. The four corners attached to the central four-armed spider and the four "floating" corners that can be removed from the mechanism easily. These corners cannot be interchanged i.e. in a single group of four corners, their relative positions are unchanged. A floating corner can be distinguished by squishing down when applying pressure to the corner. The centers only have two possible orientations, seen by scrambling a Skewb-like puzzle where the center orientation is visible (such as the Skewb Diamond or Skewb Ultimate), or by disassembling the puzzle.

Records

The world record single solve is 0.75 seconds, set by Carter Kucala of the United States at Going Fast in Grandview 2024.[4] The world record average of 5 (excluding fastest and slowest) is 1.52 seconds, set by Carter Kucala of the United States at CubingUSA Heartland Championship 2024, with times of 1.65, 1.45, (2.57), (1.37), and 1.45 seconds.[4]

Top 5 solvers by single solve

Rank Name[5] Result Competition
1 Carter Kucala 0.75s Going Fast in Grandview 2024
2 Zayn Khanani 0.81s Rubik's WCA North American Championship 2022
3 Simon Kellum 0.85s Going Fast in Grandview 2024
4 Brayden Wroten 0.86s Oredigger Open CO 2025
5 Szymon Brągiel 0.87s Żory Open 2025
6 Antoni Stojek 0.88s Cube Factory Brzeziny 2024
Manuel Prieto de Antón Baztan Open 2023
8 Ignacy Samselski 0.89s Żmigród Open 2024
9 Dominic Redisi 0.91s Trains on Main La Grange 2024
10 Jonathan Pires Medeiros 0.92s Paraíso Summer DC 2025

Top 5 solvers by Olympic average of 5 solves

Rank Name[6] Result Competition Times
1 Ignacy Samselski 1.37s Cube Factory League Justynów 2025 1.22, 1.43, (1.16), 1.46, 2.93
2 Carter Kucala 1.52s CubingUSA Heartland Championship 2024 1.65, 1.45, (2.57), (1.37), 1.45
3 Dominic Redisi 1.53s Rubik’s WCA North American Championship 2024 (2.05), 1.63, 1.43, 1.52, (1.07)
4 Zayn Khanani 1.56s Pretzel Mania 2022 1.30, (1.20), 1.79, 1.60, (4.89)
5 Kaixi Guo 1.63s Xi'an New Year 2025 1.61, 1.60, 1.69, (1.43), (2.97)
6 Oskar Hanuszkiewicz 1.64s Beskidy Cubing Day 2025 1.62, 1.64, (1.46), (2.14), 1.65
7 Tomasz Pietruszka 1.69s Silesian Cubing Mysłowice 2025 1.65, (2.85), 1.72, 1.71, (1.52)
8 Alex Rosado Saez de Langarica 1.70s Tafalla Open 2025 1.55, (1.53), (1.93), 1.70, 1.86
9 Brayden Wroten 1.73s Grand Junction Dysfunction 2025 1.77, 1.70, 1.72, (3.44), (1.33)
10 Vojtěch Grohmann 1.78s Rubik's German Nationals 2024 1.78, 1.93, (2.39), 1.64, (1.32)

See also

References

  1. ^ "Tony Durham Mechanical Puzzles". The Metagrobologist. Retrieved September 22, 2020.
  2. ^ "Jaap's Puzzle Page, Skewb Page". Jaap's Puzzle Page.
  3. ^ "Add Skewb. Resolves issue #102. · thewca/wca-regulations@66d6da9". GitHub. Retrieved 2021-01-26.
  4. ^ a b World Cube Association Official Results - Skewb
  5. ^ World Cube Association [1]
  6. ^ World Cube Association [2]