Can you solve the death race riddle Alex Gendler

The night before the Death Race
across the Wastelands is set to begin,

your uncle,
the great inventor Slate Kanoli,

got kidnapped
by the ruthless No-Side gang.

The only way to get him back
is to race his Coil Runner

against the gang yourself.

Win and they’ll give back your uncle.

Lose and you’ll forfeit the Coil Runner
and all his other creations.

As the grueling race gets underway,

you find yourself falling further
and further behind.

Your only chance is to take a shortcut
your uncle told you about––

the Flux Ravine gambit.

Fortunately, the Coil Runner comes
equipped with emergency turbo thrusters.

Unfortunately, your uncle
was a notorious tinkerer,

and the system still had some kinks
to work out.

Just minor things
like the ignition exploding,

the reactor leaking,
or the oxygen levels depleting—

any of which would end
your racing career immediately.

Before his kidnapping,

Uncle Slate determined
that each of these critical failures

was the ultimate result
of a chain reaction

originating in the thrusters.

He was also certain that while one factor
could trigger two different effects,

and two factors could each independently
lead to the same effect,

no effect is caused by two factors
in conjunction.

However, Uncle Slate
never got around to pinpointing

which thruster was responsible
for which error.

All you have
are the notes from his test runs:

  1. When thrusters B and C are on,
    the Fuel gauge glows.

  2. When thrusters A, B, and D are on,

the Fuel gauge glows
and the Helium tank rattles.

  1. When thrusters C, D, and E are on,

the Fuel gauge glows
and the Gravitometer spins.

  1. When thrusters A, D, and E are on,

the Gravitometer spins
and the Helium tank rattles.

  1. Shortly after the Helium tank rattles
    and the Gravitometer spins,

the Ignition explodes
and the Oxygen levels deplete.

  1. Shortly after the Fuel gauge glows
    and the Gravitometer spins,

the Reactor leaks.

You need to use
as many thrusters as possible

to give yourself the best chance
at clearing the gap,

without triggering any of the three
catastrophic failures.

Which thrusters should you activate?

Answer in 3

Answer in 2

Answer in 1

The most important thing
to remember here

is that even if we know
that one thing causes another,

the converse is not necessarily true.

For example, this panic switch
shuts off the coil runner’s engine.

But the engine being off
doesn’t necessarily mean

the panic switch was engaged—

the coil runner could be
out of fuel, or damaged—

or turned off normally.

We can, however,
conclude that if the engine is running,

the panic switch hasn’t been engaged.

With that in mind, one way we can start
is to work backwards

from the three defects that could
knock you out of the race.

So let’s look at Slate’s last two notes,

since they give direct information
about those.

The Gravitometer spins in both cases,
but the results are different.

That means the spinning Gravitometer

can’t be the cause
of any particular malfunction.

If it were, the same thing would happen
each time.

So we can conclude that a glowing
Fuel gauge makes the reactor leak,

while a rattling Helium tank
makes the Ignition explode

and depletes the Oxygen levels.

Once we know which two errors
we need to avoid,

we can make a table
and use the logic of cause and effect

to see which thrusters trigger them.

Since the Helium tank is fine
during the first test run

when thrusters B and C are active,

we can assume neither makes it rattle.

And from the third run
we know that D and E don’t either.

That leaves thruster A,

which was indeed used
in the second and fourth test runs

where the Helium tank rattled.

Now what causes the glowing Fuel gauge?

From the fourth test run we know
it can’t be thrusters A, D, or E.

So is the culprit, B, C,
or each of them separately?

The answer can be found
in the second and third test runs:

the fuel tank glowed in both,
but B was activated in one,

and C in the other.

That means the B and C thrusters each
independently make the Fuel tank glow.

It looks like the A, B, and C
thrusters are off limits.

Fortunately, the other two
are just enough to clear the jump.

You rocket into first place

and the gang
begrudgingly hands over your uncle.

He thanks you profusely,
and decides to celebrate your victory

with a cup of tea
from his latest contraption…

穿越荒原的死亡竞赛
即将开始的前一天晚上,

你的叔叔
,伟大的发明家 Slate Kanoli,

被无情的无边帮派绑架了。

让他回来的唯一方法
是自己与帮派比赛他的线圈赛跑者

赢了,他们会还给你叔叔的。

输了,您将失去 Coil Runner
和他的所有其他作品。

随着艰苦比赛的进行,

您会发现自己
越来越落后。

你唯一的机会是走
你叔叔告诉你的捷径

——Flux Ravine 策略。

幸运的是,Coil Runner
配备了紧急涡轮推进器。

不幸的是,你的叔叔
是一个臭名昭著的修补匠,

而且这个系统还有一些问题
需要解决。

诸如点火爆炸

、反应堆泄漏
或氧气水平耗尽等小事——

任何这些都会
立即结束你的赛车生涯。

在他被绑架之前,

斯莱特叔叔确定
这些严重故障中的每一个都是

源自推进器的连锁反应的最终结果。

他还确信,一个因素
可以引发两种不同的影响

,两个因素可以各自独立
地产生相同的影响,

但两个因素共同作用不会产生影响

然而,斯莱特叔叔
从来没有查明是

哪个推进器
导致了哪个错误。

您所
拥有的只是他的试运行记录:

  1. 当推进器 B 和 C 开启时
    ,燃油表会发光。

  2. 当推进器 A、B 和 D 开启时

,燃油表亮起
,氦气罐发出嘎嘎声。

  1. 当推进器 C、D 和 E 开启时

,燃油表亮起
,重力计旋转。

  1. 当推进器 A、D 和 E 开启时

,重力计旋转
并且氦气罐发出嘎嘎声。

  1. 氦气罐发出
    嘎嘎声并且重力计旋转后不久

,点火装置爆炸
,氧气水平耗尽。

  1. 燃油表亮起
    且重力计旋转后不久

,反应堆泄漏。

您需要使用
尽可能多的推进器,

以便让自己有最好的机会
来消除差距,

而不会触发三个
灾难性故障中的任何一个。

您应该激活哪些推进器?

回答 3

回答 2

回答 1 这里要记住

的最重要的一点

是,即使我们
知道一件事导致另一件事

,反过来也不一定正确。

例如,这个紧急开关会
关闭线圈转轮的引擎。

但发动机关闭
并不一定

意味着紧急开关已接合——

线圈转轮可能
没有燃料,或损坏——

或正常关闭。

但是,我们可以
得出结论,如果发动机正在运行,

则应急开关没有被接合。

考虑到这一点,我们可以开始的一种方法

从可能使您退出比赛的三个缺陷向后工作

因此,让我们看看 Slate 的最后两个注释,

因为它们提供了
有关这些的直接信息。

重力仪在这两种情况下都会旋转,
但结果不同。

这意味着旋转的重力仪

不会
是任何特定故障的原因。

如果是的话,每次都会发生同样的事情

因此,我们可以得出结论,发光的
燃料计使反应堆泄漏,

而嘎嘎作响的氦气罐
使点火装置爆炸

并耗尽氧气水平。

一旦我们知道
我们需要避免哪两个错误,

我们就可以制作一个表格
并使用因果逻辑

来查看哪些推进器触发了它们。

由于

当推进器 B 和 C 处于活动状态时,氦气罐在第一次试运行期间很好,

我们可以假设两者都不会让它嘎嘎作响。

从第三次运行
我们知道 D 和 E 也没有。

剩下的就是推进器 A,

它确实
在氦气罐发出嘎嘎声的第二次和第四次试运行

中使用。

现在是什么导致发光的燃油表?

从第四次试运行我们知道
它不可能是推进器 A、D 或 E。

那么罪魁祸首是 B、C
还是分别?

答案可以
在第二次和第三次试运行中找到

:油箱都亮了,
但其中一个激活了 B,另一个激活

了 C。

这意味着 B 和 C 推进器各自
独立地使油箱发光。

看起来 A、B 和 C
推进器是禁区。

幸运的是,另外
两个足以清除跳跃。

你飞升到第一名

,这帮人不
情愿地交出了你的叔叔。

他非常感谢你,
并决定


他最新发明的一杯茶来庆祝你的胜利……