• Quick note - the problem with Youtube videos not embedding on the forum appears to have been fixed, thanks to ZiprHead. If you do still see problems let me know.

explain this

Well, the number's always going to be a multiple of 9 and all the 9 multiples have the same symbol. You get the illusion because which symbol is used on the 9s changes each time it's done.

For the maths

Think of it as picking 2 numbers, x & y.

If x = 5 and y = 3, your number is 53 : 10x + y
Now subtract (x+y) and you get
10x + y -x -y = 9x which will always be a multiple of 9.
 
Oh my God! It's even more amazing than that! You can add the two digits of your chosen number, then reduce that again if it's still two digits, then subtract the result from your original number and it still works!

Double oh my God! You can even add up the two digits of the difference and pick that number!

It couldn't have anything to do with math, because I'm no good at math.

~~ Paul
 
I think there is another version of this around where the numbers are listed down the screen and the first 1-8 don't change. Makes it harder to spot what is going on if you don't do the math.
 
Hey NWilner.

Here's a simple answer... keep using the same number over and over... notice that the symbol keeps changing and that symbol is the same one in the magic ball?


That's your answer. Some of the numbers (the "magic" ones) all have the same symbol as the magic ball... every time.
 
seems right on the explanation. this is a good trick tho, gets a lot of head scratches.
 
Interesting little Flash movie, it took me about 4 or 5 tries to figure out what it worked :)
 
There's another trick which works along similar lines.

You're presented with 4 cards and asked to concentrate on one. The magic application will sense which one you are concentrating on and remove it from the set. You click the button and - lo - your card is gone.

Took me a few goes to figure out that all the cards change with each click - but to similar values (i.e. you don't get cards changing suit, or from picture to non-picture) and because you're concentrating on one card, you don't spot the others. Works surprisingly well.
 

Back
Top Bottom