justonevote
JustOneVote
justonevote

lets the female cast be free to be zany and crazy and whatnot.

Then you could solve this puzzle by asking "Is this statement false?" and only one other question. So you only need two questions regardless of how the honest and lying gods answer questions regarding the random god, if what you are saying is true.

Then you could solve this problem by asking "Is this answer false" and only one other question?

I grew up in St. Louis. Although the "Cardinal Way" stuff doesn't warrent the amount of whining Deadspin fosters, it isn't a figment of Drew Magary's imagination. Even Post Dispatch Columnists have pointed it out:

Wait . . . you mean, Matheny isn't the only manager who has the audacity to speak positively about his team? No no no. No other manager is baseball does that. They get up and say "I don't even like these players as people. It's just a job. Our club-house culture is to just collect our paycheck and go home." That is,

For what it's worth I do think your version is harder. I solved Munroe ' s puzzle pretty quickly, but I read your version and I have to admit I'm not entirely sure *why* the solution the works. Your wording prompted me to think of some of the same questions Munroe lists on his solution page. And I can't answer them.

Let's assume only one dragon has green eyes. He knows none of the other dragons have green eyes, so when he hears that there are "at least one" with green eyes, he immediately realizes it his him. He turns into sparrow at the first midnight.