Have we solved every scramble?

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 14. 06. 2019
  • Everyone knows the 3x3 has 43,252,003,274,489,856,000 different combinations. The question is whether or not they have all been solved. Lets analyze that question.
    PART 2 • Part 2 | Have we solve...
    SpeedCubeShop: bit.ly/29T04KW
    Discount Code "REDVSBLUE"
    Music Credits:
    Scheming Weasal
    Victory Of War
    Friendly Day
    Pooka
    SOCIAL MEDIA
    Twitter: / cubeorithms
    Instagram: / cubeorithms
    Discord: / discord
    2ND CHANNEL: / @cuberrhythms2042 Patreon: / cubeorithms
    Teespring: teespring.com/stores/cubeorithms
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 1,9K

  • @Atomas69
    @Atomas69 Před 5 lety +4754

    Non-cubers: *we scrambled every solve*

    • @hamadachetouane9297
      @hamadachetouane9297 Před 5 lety +63

      There are a lot of solves ... why didn't you tell me before the competition !?

    • @erlindtv4069
      @erlindtv4069 Před 5 lety +18

      hahaha this made my day

    • @happyfakeboulder644
      @happyfakeboulder644 Před 5 lety +21

      me at first: yeah sure whatever i'll like this
      me 8 seconds later: i mean THAT ACTUALLY IS TRUE because there's only one solve

    • @SuperDZ555
      @SuperDZ555 Před 5 lety +3

      This needs to be pinned

    • @vmarzein
      @vmarzein Před 5 lety +3

      There. I made a 666

  • @yognaught2793
    @yognaught2793 Před 5 lety +3282

    Technically 1 move equals to 1 scramble. So that means we go through a bunch of different scrambles each solve.

  • @namala3009
    @namala3009 Před 5 lety +881

    But, every turn would create another scramble, thus doing about 45 scrambles per solve.

    • @matthewwilcox2055
      @matthewwilcox2055 Před 5 lety +55

      45 if they're doing fmc, probably closer to about 60-80 per solve for people who average 30 seconds

    • @Hi_Brien
      @Hi_Brien Před 4 lety +13

      You make a valid point

    • @supertommy6422
      @supertommy6422 Před 4 lety +64

      But as people get to last layer or even f2l, there would be more and more repeated scrambles

    • @joyhatake4054
      @joyhatake4054 Před 4 lety +4

      You are correct

    • @ianmoore5502
      @ianmoore5502 Před 4 lety +10

      Psh if you're using heise. More like 90-150 per solve, but that's reduced to the common steps we all end up at. Certainly every last layer case on every side has been solved, and probably w decent number of the cross cases.

  • @cyrix165
    @cyrix165 Před 4 lety +274

    Short answer: No
    Long answer:

    • @karinas5069
      @karinas5069 Před 4 lety +2

      EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE

    • @dumguyawesome
      @dumguyawesome Před 3 lety +2

      @@SenjuTheSlime but u can do each combination on a different way , Like R U , R2 U2 , R2 U' etc

    • @CoachDChapman
      @CoachDChapman Před 3 lety +2

      The long answer is: WELL I DON'T KNOW MAYBE

    • @CoachDChapman
      @CoachDChapman Před 3 lety

      It's on 3:12

    • @songa5783
      @songa5783 Před 3 lety

      hi

  • @captech93
    @captech93 Před 5 lety +1333

    I think we solved all of them
    Whelp
    TIME TO GO ON TO THE 4x4x4

    • @jamiecasimir5040
      @jamiecasimir5040 Před 5 lety +4

      Oof

    • @JersenMapper
      @JersenMapper Před 5 lety +34

      and the 5x5x5, then the 6x6x6, then the 7x7x7, then the 8x8x8, then the 9x9x9, then the 10x10x10, then the 11x11x11, then the 12x12x12, then the 13x13x13, then the 3878578352365247856789345346537645634567895654654765735667657887487684979678976945686908088768970878675869785647656751234387857835236524785678934534653764563456789565465476573566765788748768497967897694568690808876897087867586978564765675387857835236524785678934534653764563456789565465476573566765788748768497967897694568690808876897087867586978564765675387857835236524785678934534653764563456789565465476573566765788748768497967897694568690808876897087867586978564765675387857835236524785678934534653764563456789565465476573566765788748768497967897694568690808876897087867586978564765675387857835236524785678934534653764563456789565465476573566765788748768497967897694568690808876897087867586978564765675x3878578352365247856789345346537645634567895654654765735667657887487684979678976945686908088768970878675869785647656751234387857835236524785678934534653764563456789565465476573566765788748768497967897694568690808876897087867586978564765675387857835236524785678934534653764563456789565465476573566765788748768497967897694568690808876897087867586978564765675387857835236524785678934534653764563456789565465476573566765788748768497967897694568690808876897087867586978564765675387857835236524785678934534653764563456789565465476573566765788748768497967897694568690808876897087867586978564765675387857835236524785678934534653764563456789565465476573566765788748768497967897694568690808876897087867586978564765675x3878578352365247856789345346537645634567895654654765735667657887487684979678976945686908088768970878675869785647656751234387857835236524785678934534653764563456789565465476573566765788748768497967897694568690808876897087867586978564765675387857835236524785678934534653764563456789565465476573566765788748768497967897694568690808876897087867586978564765675387857835236524785678934534653764563456789565465476573566765788748768497967897694568690808876897087867586978564765675387857835236524785678934534653764563456789565465476573566765788748768497967897694568690808876897087867586978564765675387857835236524785678934534653764563456789565465476573566765788748768497967897694568690808876897087867586978564765675.

    • @jamiecasimir5040
      @jamiecasimir5040 Před 5 lety +2

      Haha

    • @captech93
      @captech93 Před 5 lety

      wow

    • @captech93
      @captech93 Před 5 lety +9

      but what about the 1x1x1?

  • @TheLarks
    @TheLarks Před 5 lety +1607

    The real question is... have we solved every combination on the 1x1

  • @cooperdelauter3544
    @cooperdelauter3544 Před 4 lety +280

    While the math does technically add up, there is something we are overlooking. In the process of solving the scramble, we are encountering a new scramble after each move.

    • @emymontelibano8325
      @emymontelibano8325 Před 4 lety

      But how does that change the number of scrambles?

    • @onenottwo3918
      @onenottwo3918 Před 4 lety +12

      @@emymontelibano8325 it means you solve several scrambles per solve if someone can do the maths to account for repeats then it would be a more accurate approximation of how long it would take to solve the Rubik's cube

    • @aegerman6317
      @aegerman6317 Před 4 lety +2

      Hey I’m 4 months late but blame the algorithm for recommending this to me. If you counted these as different solves then you wouldn’t be able to solve it, because as you near the end, there would be billions and billions of people with the same “scramble” as they’re about to solve it. If everyone is assumed to be solving a different scramble then you can’t count every move towards completion a scramble

    • @ravenssunglasses2660
      @ravenssunglasses2660 Před 4 lety

      hes talking about solving a scramble, a starting point. Scrambling the cube up and solving it, thats 1 scramble done, move on to the next one.

    • @lordyoav7836
      @lordyoav7836 Před 2 lety

      and the fact that people may encounter the same scramble twice

  • @derekus9962
    @derekus9962 Před 4 lety +118

    0:29 did anyone realise the left guy’s result was Pi

    • @andreisupervloguri8058
      @andreisupervloguri8058 Před 3 lety +6

      WOW, how did you spot that?

    • @joanna954
      @joanna954 Před 3 lety +1

      i know that

    • @andreisupervloguri8058
      @andreisupervloguri8058 Před 3 lety +2

      @@puppetpodcast3642 I know 3,1415926535897932384626433

    • @dillontsang3310
      @dillontsang3310 Před 3 lety +1

      Andrei super vloguri 3.14159265358979323846264338327

    • @TotallyNotJ4denn
      @TotallyNotJ4denn Před 3 lety +2

      Andrei super vloguri 3.141592653589793911818120119901929010192919928819919818229199182910101819101101919191019828291918228191999991226661199118919928828822882289229292992928228292727282822626272891910019919191919129938484857755996690302919191818111002972822727366319119198228282818183882288191982181182828188282910102929191929299919191929291919191881818181199192819191891918181819191819199181819191919191919181882819281918929172728189282818199118819229828192827189298112990101928191082020181819191927829291092819288101828881822552288227556646252511119198182288282822828181881188281818818118811828281819191919191919191991919191929291919191919299192929299282838288388737383981838828282828282228282928281818718181818181919191019191819100010119900000011919199119188181191918181818888866118818181818181889688228818181818181281881818181919191919119919191919119919191981818188191898 is all I know

  • @TDRPCubing
    @TDRPCubing Před 5 lety +552

    Wow. This video was really interesting and enjoyable to watch. You should do more of these.

  • @twistiicuber1055
    @twistiicuber1055 Před 5 lety +66

    0:43 *the Earth is a cube confirmed*

  • @eevee3900
    @eevee3900 Před 4 lety +22

    1:43 earth is cube confirmed

  • @pixd7285
    @pixd7285 Před 4 lety +27

    it takes 82,290,721,602,910.69 years to solve every scramble at paneloppy's speed
    *nice*

  • @doricecubing43
    @doricecubing43 Před 5 lety +218

    I've actually always had this question since I started cubing

    • @officialhideyo
      @officialhideyo Před 5 lety +11

      But actually we might have, coz while solving a cube we move across more than 60-70 scrambles (combinations).
      Like even if ur cube is going to be solved by just one move, it's still a scramble. So we may have solved at least 10 quintrillion combinations

    • @CharlieCubes
      @CharlieCubes Před 5 lety +7

      Literally thought your name was divorce cubing lol

    • @doricecubing43
      @doricecubing43 Před 5 lety +1

      @@officialhideyo I think that u r right

    • @pedrosantos1480
      @pedrosantos1480 Před 5 lety +1

      @@officialhideyo no cuz even when you make a conbination in just a second, and with 10 bilion people, working 24/7 it takes 137 years😂😂😂😂

    • @vela7447
      @vela7447 Před 5 lety

      Yeah but if you organize into f2l, then there are far fewer cases. Then color neutral... also, doing a move U4 move moves through 3 more scrambles. So when you're building cross, you're actually shuffling through 10+ scrambles w/ every edge piece?

  • @anventia
    @anventia Před 5 lety +79

    You forgot the rubiks cube robots, self solving cubes, virtual cubes, and you need to subtract 1 from the total permutations because 1 permutation is the solved state.

    • @mario_gabriel
      @mario_gabriel Před 4 lety +2

      anv3D that wouldn’t help xd this guy literally made 10 billion people solve 24/7 and 1 solve per second, do you think those things you mentioned would make any difference?

    • @mario_gabriel
      @mario_gabriel Před 4 lety

      Fathan Yusrizal do the math

    • @natalieeuley1734
      @natalieeuley1734 Před 4 lety +1

      In order to calculate God's Number, every single possibility was run through a cloud computing program and finding the minimum required for every single one. So actually, yes, at least one computer has solved every possibility

    • @mario_gabriel
      @mario_gabriel Před 4 lety

      Natalie Euley that’s wrong, the super computers only analyzed 55 million different combinations, because the investigators did the math to calculate all of the “equivalent” combinations and take them out, so at the end the computers had to solve 55 million possibilities.
      Here are the exact numbers:
      What the computers analyzed: 55.882.296
      Number of total combinations:
      43.252.003.274.489.856.000
      You can see that if those computers calculated the number of total combinations it would take more than billions of times of what it actually took.

    • @natalieeuley1734
      @natalieeuley1734 Před 4 lety +2

      Oh I guess that makes sense. It is all based on group theory after all

  • @andreafangman7582
    @andreafangman7582 Před 4 lety +90

    I gained 43,252,003,274,439,856,000
    Brain cells in this one video

  • @dobluo
    @dobluo Před 4 lety +6

    0:02 of course we ALL know that the 3x3x3 cube has 43,252,003,274,389,856,000 combinations

  • @alexwang982
    @alexwang982 Před 4 lety +41

    “Maybe she drank a buncha five hour energies”

  • @AWSMcube
    @AWSMcube Před 5 lety +14

    I think we've been through a lot of scrambles while doing the first steps - for example, when you move your first move to start cross, it's an entirely new scramble, isn't it? Of course, it's a lot more likely for repeat scrambles to happen on last layer (5,104 LL orientations/permutations iirc) but the state of the cube at cross and F2L is pretty unique.

  • @daniellarajimenez6273
    @daniellarajimenez6273 Před 3 lety +5

    wAdunnoU mAYb - E 3:12

  • @mistabutd1101
    @mistabutd1101 Před 3 lety +3

    0:39 i laughed harder than i shouldve

  • @zackkane3146
    @zackkane3146 Před 5 lety +55

    You forgot one point. During the solve we are also solving for the possible scrambles. So a 20 move solve would take care of 20 random scrambles

    • @litusiek7513
      @litusiek7513 Před 5 lety +1

      But we have about 1 million cubers not 10 billions

    • @dumguyawesome
      @dumguyawesome Před 3 lety +1

      Lol but still we Will never solve every combination even when we die lol so yea we Will never see it happen

    • @gan1
      @gan1 Před 2 lety

      @@litusiek7513 actually around 8 million cubers

  • @insertkahootname6233
    @insertkahootname6233 Před 5 lety +92

    WELL HAVE WE SOLVED...
    My life problems and bills

  • @jackslattery27
    @jackslattery27 Před 4 lety +5

    Funny at the end. 3:05

  • @tommyw6665
    @tommyw6665 Před 4 lety +3

    0:31 The guy on the left has pi as his time

  • @vengefulship136
    @vengefulship136 Před 5 lety +27

    **Me at **0:13****
    Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh my 6 grade brain can't handle this

  • @axsysmainacc9576
    @axsysmainacc9576 Před 5 lety +6

    Imagine Feliks drinking that 2:18

  • @BrickThunder
    @BrickThunder Před 4 lety +8

    Let’s just call thanos and tell him to snap so all of the cubes are solved.

  • @gcsuga2148
    @gcsuga2148 Před 5 lety +1

    0:31 That style is lit

  • @alcubing7629
    @alcubing7629 Před 5 lety +6

    Me:have we solved every scramble?
    Blue:Hold my 3x3

  • @MuhammadAhsanKaleem
    @MuhammadAhsanKaleem Před 5 lety +4

    Amazing video! Shows how big that number really is

  • @bruhmomentoes
    @bruhmomentoes Před rokem +1

    Fun fact: every time you solve a scramble you solve every position that you cube was in when you were solving for example, if you do a t perm you solve (amount of moves a t perm has) you solve every position a t perm has.

  • @yodoshow
    @yodoshow Před 4 lety +1

    One thing to consider is that during each solve every step closer you get to solving the cube I think would technically be considered still a scramble. say it takes a hundred moves for you to solve a cube that is you solving 100 separate scrambles.

  • @jjoshu_a
    @jjoshu_a Před 4 lety +10

    non-cubers: uh dont mind me... *im just gonna go bleach my...eyes*

  • @Trollface2.0
    @Trollface2.0 Před 2 lety +3

    2:30 wow this is scary are you okay?

  • @Hiro-wq5di
    @Hiro-wq5di Před 4 lety +1

    Wow AWESOME dude, enjoyed a lot. Keep going!

  • @kittykitkat87
    @kittykitkat87 Před 4 lety +1

    Glad to see this channel getting recommended to me. Been here Since 15000 subs. Gives me vibes of binge watching rubiks and Cup stacking videos

  • @marcb8341
    @marcb8341 Před 5 lety +14

    Wooooo love your vids blue
    Miss red so much :(

  • @NONE-si4ip
    @NONE-si4ip Před 3 lety +3

    1:27 Avengers Endgame in a nutshell

  • @user-dq2tv5xr4w
    @user-dq2tv5xr4w Před 4 měsíci +1

    This is my favorite Rubik’s cube video ever!

  • @hussmod
    @hussmod Před 6 měsíci +2

    When you realize one day someone will finally complete the last ever rubik's cube scramble and no one will know💀

    • @Terratomere
      @Terratomere Před 5 měsíci

      actually thats not happening due to the sheer amount of combinations

  • @TheRandomizerYT
    @TheRandomizerYT Před 4 lety +3

    How was I not subscribed to this channel...
    Probably my favourite now... 😊😂👍

  • @Namuundoesstuff
    @Namuundoesstuff Před 5 lety +3

    This is so informative thank you cuborithms you are my favourite youtuber

  • @FabGamer
    @FabGamer Před 4 lety +1

    2:08
    Cats: Are we a joke to you?

  • @legendaryhusky1772
    @legendaryhusky1772 Před 4 lety

    This was really interesting, I didn’t know there were that many possible combinations, and it’s pretty funny

  • @davr1
    @davr1 Před 5 lety +10

    Did he count every possible combination you make while scrambling/solving the cube, since in under a minute/second you will get from that combination to a solved cube?
    Edit: part 2

  • @eel8303
    @eel8303 Před 5 lety +6

    Blue!!! The Evil Rubik's Cube is almost 1million...
    Evil Rubik's Cube 3?!

  • @clex2349
    @clex2349 Před 5 lety +2

    To be fair though, as you begin to solve it, one turn later you are then solving the cube from that state too so one turn later and you begin to solve 2 different positions and 5 turns later you are solving 6 cubes and so on. Although every time you solve it again many positions would be repeated.

  • @jamuspham8322
    @jamuspham8322 Před 3 lety

    2:56
    Cubeorythyms: nobodies solved for 24 hours straight
    Cube head: well se about that

  • @doggingtonbarksforlife5582
    @doggingtonbarksforlife5582 Před 5 lety +19

    This is a cuber earth...
    Everybody on it is a cuber
    Its so filled with cubers that it self is...
    A CUBE

  • @ty62c
    @ty62c Před 5 lety +11

    What's mindblowing is that every time you sit down and do a 3x3 session, most of the scrambles you get will have never appeared on a cube before.

  • @nilavsarkar748
    @nilavsarkar748 Před 4 lety +6

    0:30 The guy at extreme left got a time which equals the value of pi(3.1415926)... Wow!!!

  • @MarsLos10
    @MarsLos10 Před 4 lety +1

    Dude the way you speak reminds me of TheOdd1sOut. That's not bad at all though, I really enjoy this kind of videos, keep it up!

  • @callumsylvester9921
    @callumsylvester9921 Před 5 lety +3

    Well, when you make a move on the cube, this would result in a different scramble, right? Or are we only counting the original state it started in after scrambled?

  • @aronjoosten5571
    @aronjoosten5571 Před 4 lety +7

    next step: let’s calculate how many years it would take to give 10,000,000,000 people (sorry dogs’n aliens) a cup of super coffee...

    • @declanjames1294
      @declanjames1294 Před 3 lety

      Let's say it was teleported into the stomachs of everyone

  • @avalanche5790
    @avalanche5790 Před 2 lety +3

    Well technically, when we solve a rubin cube, we usually go through a bunch of combinations to get to the right answer, so if you to through about 30 diffirent combinations per solve this would take about 3 years, if we were to take every vertebrae on earth, thats like 1 trillion animals, so that's gonna be 9 days, and if we have every single living organism, which is about 1 septillion, times that by the 40 billion currently habitable planets, we could solve this in 10^-15 seconds, which is about how long it takes light to travel a millionth of a meter in a vacuum. However, not every character can solve it that fast, so if everybody takes 1 minute to solve, it'll tale 1 minute

  • @Omar-lx1er
    @Omar-lx1er Před 4 lety

    This was so fun to watch

  • @colinstorm2892
    @colinstorm2892 Před 5 lety +4

    YAY! Finally another video by the best cubing channel! :D

  • @yashthakurart9868
    @yashthakurart9868 Před 5 lety +3

    Welcome back to the animation video
    O my goooooooood

  • @gdal6961
    @gdal6961 Před 4 lety +1

    1:29 THE EARTH IS A CUBE CONFIMED

  • @emmanuel7704
    @emmanuel7704 Před 4 lety +1

    The thing is technically every turn can be considered a new scramble which leads to a solve at the end (if you do u2 on a cube and u 1 on the rest, assuming that it started out solved, you had 3 scrambles)

  • @steeghosaurus_
    @steeghosaurus_ Před 5 lety +4

    So if you start on a scramble and take 40 moves to solve, wouldn't that equal 40 different scrambles solved? As the cube is scrambled differently evertime you move once

    • @JosephDewey
      @JosephDewey Před 2 lety

      Technically, yes. But the closer the cube gets to a solved state, then it's just a tiny, tiny percentage of the total 43 quadrillion possible scrambles. Or in other words, the last 20-30 moves are going to be shared by a ton of people.

  • @rvhhhhh
    @rvhhhhh Před 5 lety +37

    what about a 2x2? 2x2 is really quick

    • @thekadenman3125
      @thekadenman3125 Před 5 lety

      How about parity?

    • @rvhhhhh
      @rvhhhhh Před 5 lety +1

      @@thekadenman3125 on which cube. 4x4 6x6 8x8 10x10 and 12x12 all have parody

    • @rubikscubedude4028
      @rubikscubedude4028 Před 5 lety

      And SQ-1

    • @rvhhhhh
      @rvhhhhh Před 5 lety

      @@rubikscubedude4028 sorry, and that 2
      I can't remember all of them

    • @thijsbeentjes4008
      @thijsbeentjes4008 Před 5 lety

      2x2 we most likely have done all of them, there are only like 3,6mil possible permutations I believe

  • @_wetmath_
    @_wetmath_ Před 3 lety +1

    every time you turn you create another scrambled state (except solved state). so if someone just does the devils algorithm and goes through every scramble we could say we have solved every possible scramble. (which would take very long but remember it's one person doing one cube unlike the crazy conditions in this video)

  • @alexgamer4859
    @alexgamer4859 Před 2 lety +1

    I like how at 0:31 the time of the guy on the left are just the first few digits of pi.

  • @deadaccount4164
    @deadaccount4164 Před 4 lety +3

    This was a great event. I remember it was scary when everyone came. But still cool.

  • @shakthiveluaj8782
    @shakthiveluaj8782 Před 5 lety +5

    Have we got every possible scramble on a 3*3 even in the middle of a solve and while shuffling.

  • @nadeemashraf5375
    @nadeemashraf5375 Před 4 lety +1

    This video reminds me of that oneodd ones out video both were amazing

  • @Supermaneuverable_Sukhoi_Su-35

    3:04
    Cubeorithims: have we solved every possible scramble on a 3x3 ?
    Me: well i dont know maybe

  • @sebasmica
    @sebasmica Před 4 lety +3

    2:01 even Waliugi?

  • @matthewwilcox2055
    @matthewwilcox2055 Před 5 lety +3

    There are way too many variables you didn't take into account, such as solving about 50-100 different permutations per solve, and the cases that are less than 5 moves to solve, which would take Penelope much less than 30 seconds.

  • @Hiro-wq5di
    @Hiro-wq5di Před 4 lety +1

    One of the best video on the whole frick'in internet!!!!!!!

  • @triangulum8869
    @triangulum8869 Před 4 lety

    i dont do rubiks cubes ever but this was recommended and i like it

  • @Meezzz
    @Meezzz Před 5 lety +23

    This is how many times YOU solved the cube!
    ⬇⬇⬇

  • @dtdtdt7548
    @dtdtdt7548 Před 4 lety +3

    8,442,251,078,152,344,000 solves
    That was a guess ok I'm no genius 2 do that

  • @christinajothiprakasam23

    Your animations are so cool

  • @TTVArgusGuy
    @TTVArgusGuy Před 5 lety +2

    I have no idea how to even solve a cube, but I still found this extremely interesting

  • @PietroFurbatto
    @PietroFurbatto Před 5 lety +4

    When you are solving, you are generating new scrambles anyway 😂

  • @daffa_fm4583
    @daffa_fm4583 Před 5 lety +7

    1 minute / 6000
    = 1 second / 100
    = 1 centisecond
    = 1.3715 years to do it

  • @akiren8538
    @akiren8538 Před 4 lety

    I just discovered your channel,
    *Im addicted*

  • @lesleyd9969
    @lesleyd9969 Před 4 lety

    Most creative cubing video I've seen in quite some time.

  • @darkreapergaming8784
    @darkreapergaming8784 Před 4 lety +4

    2:12 are they going to area 51?
    Or just morgz copying mrbeast

  • @hamadachetouane9297
    @hamadachetouane9297 Před 5 lety +3

    1:17 *69* lol

  • @bpdolesdominoes4
    @bpdolesdominoes4 Před 4 lety

    This video feels to me like the video version of the book “what if?”... and I love that

  • @arche_louowlgaming2481
    @arche_louowlgaming2481 Před 3 lety +2

    2:35 everyone has a sezier

  • @victorguy5935
    @victorguy5935 Před 5 lety +9

    Hey blue today's my birthday

  • @aryamaangoswamy179
    @aryamaangoswamy179 Před 5 lety +29

    I have a question
    Would you rather:
    Never animate (love this comment Blue)
    Never cube (reply Blue)

    • @origaminewt
      @origaminewt Před 5 lety

      he would probably stick to cubing more due to the fact animations aren't the only type of videos he makes, and instead of animations he can make comics or some real like editing or skit to tell the stories

    • @corybarton4758
      @corybarton4758 Před 4 lety

      Hi

  • @oximas
    @oximas Před 4 lety +1

    legend says once all scrambles are solved a portal to the other dimensions will open

  • @kubatutak9452
    @kubatutak9452 Před 5 lety

    If we would do random stuff with this cube, every combination decreases chance for finding new combinations, something like 1/x where X is anmount of found combinations, then multipily all those probalities, chance is stupidly small

  • @Jahrbii
    @Jahrbii Před 4 lety +3

    Moving the thumbnail up and down makes the cubes move
    Like to show others

  • @Haglax
    @Haglax Před 5 lety +3

    The fact that when we solve, we go through let's say 30 combinations (1 per turn, 30TPS), we can divide the total amount by 30 so that it's possible to solve every combinations in 4.6 years.

  • @Zoot004
    @Zoot004 Před 4 lety +2

    @Cubeorithms I don't think we've "solved every scramble" but I think every non-cuber has scrambled every cube.

  • @anjimationx679
    @anjimationx679 Před 4 lety

    It would take around 2 months years if this scenario had information form the second video so pretty good.

  • @id7834
    @id7834 Před 5 lety +3

    Cubing-Animations
    Cubomations
    Is this a dump reaction of me?
    Yes it is.

  • @archismandas5173
    @archismandas5173 Před 5 lety +7

    I think Blue spent 43quintilion years doing all the calculations 😂😂

  • @getamongussed7938
    @getamongussed7938 Před 4 lety

    0:32 Thats A Really Good Animation

  • @manimate5420
    @manimate5420 Před 3 lety +1

    blue: maybe she just drank a bunch of 5 hour energy idk
    monster energy and red bull: are we a joke to you?

  • @meatslizer9682
    @meatslizer9682 Před 4 lety +4

    Earth is round
    Earth is flat
    Shut up ... We all know it's a cube

  • @matei3071
    @matei3071 Před 4 lety +3

    what if we used 100% of our brain?

  • @TrossardWasUnavailable
    @TrossardWasUnavailable Před 5 lety +1

    Fun Fact
    The 1 by 1 has
    1,989,818,927,828,735,729,578,729,728,293,388,292
    1.9 undecillion scrambles

  • @noyer947
    @noyer947 Před 4 lety

    I've always discounted most of these because of corner twists and edge flipping (as I'm sure most of y'all are aware) but have we solved every scramble within our solveable state? That is to say without flips or twists as that enters an entirely new set of scrambles.