Rubik's Cube
is a 3-D twisty puzzle invented in 1974 by Hungarian sculptor
and professor
of architecture
Erno Rubik.
Originally called the "Magic Cube", the puzzle was licensed by Rubik
to be sold by Ideal Toy Corp. in 1980 via German businessman
Tibor Laczi and Seven Towns founder Tom Kremer,
and won the German Game of the Year special award for Best
Puzzle that year. As of January 2009, 350 million cubes had been sold worldwide
making it the world's top-selling puzzle game. It is widely considered to be
the world's best-selling toy.
In a classic Rubik's Cube, each of the six faces is covered
by nine stickers, each of one of six solid colours (traditionally white, red,
blue, orange, green, and yellow).
An internal pivot mechanism enables each face to turn independently, thus
mixing up the colours. For the puzzle to be solved, each face must be returned
to consisting of one colour. Similar puzzles have now been produced with
various numbers of sides, dimensions, and stickers, not all of them by Rubik.
Although the Rubik's Cube reached its height of mainstream
popularity in the 1980s, it is still widely known and used. Many speedcubers
continue to practice it and other twisty puzzles and compete for the fastest
times in various categories. Its international governing body, the World Cube Association, has organised
competitions and kept the official world records since 2003. In March 1970,
Larry Nichols invented a 2×2x2 "Puzzle with Pieces Rotatable in
Groups" and filed a Canadian patent application for it. Nichols's cube was
held together with magnets. Nichols was granted U.S. Patent 3,655,201 on
April 11, 1972, two years before Rubik invented his Cube.
On April 9, 1970, Frank Fox applied to patent his
"Spherical 3x3x3". He received his UK patent on January 16, 1974.
In the mid-1970s, Erno Rubik worked at the Department of
Interior Design at the Academy of Applied Arts and Crafts
in Budapest. Although it is widely reported that the Cube was built as a
teaching tool to help his students understand 3D objects, his actual purpose
was solving the structural problem of moving the parts independently without
the entire mechanism falling apart. He did not realize that he had created a
puzzle until the first time he scrambled his new Cube and then tried to restore
it. Rubik obtained Hungarian patent HU170062 for his "Magic Cube"
in 1975. Rubik's Cube was first called the Magic Cube in Hungary. The puzzle
had not been patented internationally within a year of the original patent.
Patent law then prevented the possibility of an international patent. Ideal
wanted at least a recognizable name to trademark; of course, that arrangement
put Rubik in the spotlight because the Magic Cube was renamed after its
inventor in 1980.
The first test batches of the Magic Cube were produced in
late 1977 and released in Budapest toy shops. Magic Cube was held together with
interlocking plastic pieces that prevented the puzzle being easily pulled
apart, unlike the magnets in Nichols's design. In September 1979, a deal was signed
with Ideal to release the Magic Cube worldwide, and the puzzle made its
international debut at the toy fairs of London, Paris, Nuremberg and New York in
January and February 1980.
After its international debut, the progress of
the Cube towards the toy shop shelves of the West was briefly halted so that it
could be manufactured to Western safety and packaging specifications. A
lighter Cube was produced, and Ideal decided to rename it. "The Gordian
Knot" and "Inca Gold" were considered,
but the company finally decided on "Rubik's Cube", and the first
batch was exported from Hungary in May 1980. Taking advantage of an initial
shortage of Cubes, many imitations and variations appeared.
Good story.-Grandma Linda
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