The puzzle was very popular locally and several more followed this original. The original page size is 8.5 by 5.5 inches. Selenby was a small want-ad digest distributed free at Safeway and other stores in the town. There is proof predating Gibats 1968 of PC's puzzles in Villa Grove High School sporting event brochures. Pat Carr had titled the puzzles "Slate R Straight" and was stolen by a copyright/patent company he sent the puzzle idea to. There is a very likely possibility James Patrick Carr of Villa Grove, Illinois created this puzzle before 1968. Gibat in the Selenby Digest on March 1, 1968, in Norman, Oklahoma, although the Spanish puzzle creator Pedro Ocón de Oro was publishing "Sopas de letras" (Spanish "Soup of Letters") before that date. The word search puzzle (also known as WordSeek, WordFind, WonderWord, etc.) was originally designed and published by Norman E. The puzzle might use every row, column, or diagonal-or just every other row, column, or diagonal. In some computer-generated puzzles, if the person solving the puzzle sees one word, all they have to do to find more is to look in adjacent rows, columns, or diagonals. Furthermore, the bigger the words and the more words, the easier they are to spot. The puzzles generated by a computer tend to put words in patterns. First, all the horizontal rows should be read both backwards and forwards, then the vertical, and so on. If a word list is not provided, a way to find words is to go row by row. Lastly, the strategy of looking for double letters in the word being searched for (if a word list is provided) proves helpful, because it is easier to spot two identical letters side-by-side than to search for two different letters. Since most word searches use capital letters, it is easiest to spot the letters that stand out from others. One can then continue this method until the entire word is found.Īnother strategy is to look for 'outstanding' letters within the word one is searching for (if a word list is provided). After finding the letter, one should look at the eight surrounding letters to see whether the next letter of the word is there. A common strategy for finding all the words is to go through the puzzle left to right (or right to left) and look for the first letter of the word (if a word list is provided).
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