Unfortunately, if one "ear" of the magic is folded down, that's DNS.  
I got one of those at Rutgers.

You might say that if, to solve it, the puzzle must reach a point two 
tiles above the table, it's DNS.

I'm not a huge fan of that rule, I might argue that it should be a 1-2 
second penalty.  Just like on the cube, there's solved, almost solved, 
and not solved.  But I haven't solved magic in about a month, so it 
doesn't really affect me much any more.

--- In [email protected], "David Skolnik" 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hey everyone, I've had this ongoing disput with a friend for a while 
> now and its time to settle it. On the 2006 version of the WCA rules 
it 
> says that the Rubik's Magic it can be solved if the puzzle is two 
> tiles higher than flat. Does that mean the last step of the 
> transformer does not have to be done? Or even the last two steps..?
> Or does it mean that the puzzle itself must be flat not partially 
> bent? 
> -David
>






 
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