20 moves is the maximum number of moves needed to solve a Rubik's Cube. However, those moves are not the same for each scramble, so you actually have to learn how to solve the cube.
the rubiks cube the rubiks cube
no way he is to stupid and self centered to solve a rubiks cube. im serious i know people. he might be the smarteset kid on earth but there is no way he could solve a rubiks cube!
this is a setup. He started with the cube solved, then repeated those two moves until it was "scrambled." Then used those two moves to unscramble it. if you repeat any sequence enough times it will return to its original state,
Rubik invented his cube in 1974. It got the name Rubik's Cube and came out as Toy of the Year in 1980. It has 43 quintillion possible moves and only 1 set of moves to solve it. Amazing isnt it?
Yes he does. He can solve a Rubiks cube in less than a minute.
No. Unless you buy the electronic rubiks cube called rubiks revolution. It has different games.
go to youtube, and there should be videos up by a person with the username 'pogobat' that has videos on how to solve the 3x3x3 and the 4x4x4 rubiks cube.
a mirror cube, the mirror cubes work the same as a rubik's cube, but takes more knowledge of the cube since you can't orient by just looking at the colours
Plastic.
The Rubik's cube is normally easier because you can us algorithms as techniques to solve it where as the rubik's 360 is based on luck and steadiness of the hand.
No, it doesn't but it can increase your understanding about various aspects of geometry. The people who are able to solve a rubik's cube don't really have higher IQ. They are able to do this because they have learn't the trick to solve it. They have hardcoded the algorithms in their brains. Anyone can solve a rubik's cube just by memorizing the algorithms and learning the technique to solve it.
The most mixed up rubiks cube can be solved in 27 moves. There are 43,252,003,274,489,856,000 possible mixed-up arrangements.