![]() ![]() Make sure you dont mess up the middles, treate them as the middle on the 3x3x3, and treat the sides you lined up as edges on the 3x3x3. Step 3: Solve like a 3x3 Here you want to get as far as you can as if you were solving this cube like a 3x3x3 cube. Turn the bottoms clockwise, the right side clockwise, the front counterclockwise, the top clockwise, right side back counterclockwise, the front back clockwise, and the bottom back counterclockwise. Lign it up so you have two of the same types of edges in the same row like in the image above and to the left. Turn the right side clockwise, the front counterclockwise, the top clockwise, right side back counterclockwise, and the front back clockwise. Try and match up the single edge pieces like in the image above, do the algorithm, and then Algorithm Start by designating a color as top, my choice is normaly white. (These next to algorithms are most commonly used when there are no more unsolved edges to swap) Orientation ExampleĮssentially you make a fixed side and in the proccess slightly mix up the centers, put it on top, then swap in an unsolved edge, then fix the centers AlgorithmĪllign the two edges up right next to each other, then turn the left or right sides in order to put the edges you ligned up on the top, the move the ligned up edge out of the way (turn the top clockwise or counterlockwise) and then pull the side back down, and fix the middles. Make white top, and find to of the same edge pieces, and lign them up like in the picture above and to the left. Every edge you allign you want to store in the top and bottom (ex: White and Yellow sides, and solve for the edges in the red, green, blue, and orange sides). ![]() Step 2: Aligning all edges Match up edges so that each of the edges matches up with another edges piece, to create one 2 piece edge piece that will stay together through the rest of the cube, its the last step in turning your 4x4 into a 3x3. ![]() So essentially everything except those two sides were affected. Find that color on the other middles of the cube Algorithmīasicaly what is happening is that you are putting the cubie you need in a position that you can move the bottom over, match up two, but them both on the bottom, then mobe the bottom back over. For a normal Rubik's Cube white is across from yellow, and if you hold white as your top and yellow as bottom, then these hold true: green is a cross from blue, red is across from orange, red is to the right of green, orange is to the left of green.Ĭhoose a side and decide what color it should be. Remember what your cube looks like before you mix it up, you have to get the centers in the correct spot or it wont work out later on. Step 1: Getting the Centers Get all the 4 cube centers on each of the 6 sides of the cube to be the same color. Check out the NEW version of the site, less ugly and with videos! ![]()
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