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DO MAGIC (Posted on 2012-03-27) Difficulty: 3 of 5
There is a 3x3 magic square (each row, each column and each main diagonal add to the same value), presented in a number base higher than ten but no higher than 36, so that A is a digit representing ten, B representing eleven, etc.

In this magic square, one of the cells contains what looks like the word DO (that's a letter O), which, by the rules, represents thirteen times whatever the base is, plus twenty-four.

Not only does the word DO appear as one of the numbers in the grid, but also the number representations in the bottom row, if concatenated together, form the word MAGIC.

What is this magic square?


Click here to see the original New Scientist Enigma No. 1680 version of this puzzle.

  Submitted by Charlie    
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Solution: (Hide)
The base, represented in decimal, is 34, and DO represents what in decimal is 466. The magic constant is 1398 in decimal, which, interestingly is 174 when represented in base-34, while 174 happens to be the decimal representation of the top-right number within the grid.

The decimal version of this magic square is:

   308   916   174
   332   466   600
   758    16   624

while the base-34 version is:

   92 QW 54
   9Q DO HM
   MA  G IC

From Enigma No. 1680, "Do magic", by Susan Denham, New Scientist, 14 January 2012, page 28.

Comments: ( You must be logged in to post comments.)
  Subject Author Date
No Subjectjendy henna2023-02-16 22:50:54
SolutionSolutionDej Mar2012-03-27 15:00:14
SolutionGot it.Jer2012-03-27 11:57:46
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