DNFphobia Member. Great guide! Sent from my Galaxy Note 2 using Tapatalk. Intuitive may not be bad. It may seem difficult in the beginning but gets easier as you practice more. One reason people like this method because of its lower movecount, which can only be achieved if you block build intuitively well. Lower move count? I must have been doing it wrong, I guess.
It took my like 50 moves and tons of mistakes to get the first block. Kirjava Colourful. JonnyWhoopes Premium Member. JonnyWhoopes said:. It can usually be done in 6 or 7.
So even if you applied the same F2L techniques for making the first block, which is very inefficient, it should still require only a fraction of that number. You must log in or register to reply here. This step is pretty self-explanatory, and there are many ways to go about it, you just have to find them. This step can usually be mentally achieved by longtime Roux uses but in the fifteen second inspection time before any given scramble.
This step is mostly completed mentally, so it is almost required that you have a basic understanding of your cube before getting decent times with this method.
Most speedcubers find this the easiest step. In this step, you add a second 1x2x3 on the opposite side from the first. If you did the white side first, now you would do the yellow 1x2x3. You have to keep intact your first 1x2x3 block on the left side.
This is a simpler task than many think, but you have to be resourceful and understand your Cube and its moves to imagine what needs to happen to complete this step. First, you must orient all your top corners up. So that's what I have done.
NB These are just the algs I use. Other Roux users use other algs. If you're trying to learn, I recommend checking out as many algs as you can, and using the ones that feel best to you. All diagrams are as if looking down on the U-face, with the colours of the edge tiles also shown.
NB This is still very much a work in progress. Recognition: look for a pair of opposite colours in the U-face, and examine the tile on the F-edge of the UFR corner to see which tile in the U-face if any it matches. Recognition: look for a pair of opposite colours in the U-face, and examine the tile on the R-edge of the UFR corner to see which tile in the U-face if any it matches.
Recognition: Examine U-face diagonal: is it matching, opposite or other? A selection of the most known methods and their respective puzzles is listed here:. Most notable here are the Square-1 methods, because they are the second most popular behind Vandenbergh and since one of them has been used to set a world record.
Anonymous Not logged in Create account Log in. Namespaces Page Discussion. More More. Page actions Read View source History. Steps: 4 No. Categories : 3x3x3 methods 3x3x3 speedsolving methods. Wiki tools Wiki tools Special pages.
Page tools Page tools. Le Roux and H. This website is a place for me to share all of the algorithms, techniques, and tips I have and use. Again the area that is affected by these algorithms … CFOP has more concrete algorithms and cases while both Roux and ZZ are more intuitive, ZZ uses fewer types of moves than Roux however. Thanks to Andy Klise, you can download it here. Latsis Foundation, Kleos S. Similarities can be drawn to the Petrus method's block building and the Waterman method's layer-on-the-left and edges-last aspects.
I have moved the general section on EO to Chapter 2 and merged the remainder of Chapter 4 with Chapter 3. Alg for that case It is a hybrid corners first and block building. Part 4: Last Layer Cross Your first objective is to orient the last layer edge pieces so they all have yellow facing up, forming a yellow cross on the last layer.
0コメント