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Meet the Tetra Puzzle

The Tetra puzzle started as an intuition: a tetrahedron (pyramid) has four corners and four faces, so there was a gut feeling we could break it up into four equal parts and build a puzzle from that idea.

Hands holding the Tetra puzzle

Breaking it apart

For starters we broke the four corners out away from the center. But to make them interlock, they would each have to donate a piece back to their three neighbors. After a lot of trial and error, we were able to determine the right angles that would let the four parts slide open simultaneously.

Tetra puzzle parts

From theory to prototype

With this theory in place, it came down to printing it out and trying. Even at this stage, you can get a puzzle printed and then find out it is no challenge at all, or it functions but isn't really any fun. It's an unpredictable process. So there are a lot of "puzzles" on the shelf that will never be made for one reason or another.

Tetra puzzle assembly animation

The finished puzzle

We're glad the Tetra captures that little spark of joy that a good puzzle should. Manufactured by Craighill, it is now available in Stainless Steel and Vapor Black.

Tetra puzzle on table

Tetra puzzle in black and silver

For more on the Tetra puzzle and how it came to be, see the Kickstarter campaign.