View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Puzzler.
Puzzler meaning
A puzzling situation or problem. | A puzzling person. | One who is mysterious.
Example sentences (13)
The answer to the previous week's "Puzzler" was given at the beginning of the "second half" of the show, and a new "Puzzler" was given at the start of the "third half".
Specifically, it’ll release the VR puzzler on Meta Quest 2 and Quest Pro on August 17 and SteamVR on September 28. SteamVR headsets include the likes of the Valve Index and the HTC Vive.
Adults who might not have done a jigsaw in years might pick anything from a 250-piece puzzle upwards – although repeat patterns of hundreds and thousands of baked beans should be left to the practised puzzler.
And woah, is this trailer immediately a trip—it’s not at all shy about proclaiming what a puzzler I’m Thinking of Ending Things is sure to be.
Anyway, it's a puzzler that rewards quiet contemplation—the kind of contemplation that continues hours after you've "stopped playing," until suddenly you sit bolt upright on the couch and shout "Eureka!" and rush to the PC to punch in a solution.
It's a bit of a puzzler, this one.
Kyrgios, 24 and gifted, is a puzzler, a flickering talent from Australia who is still sifting through his priorities and still wary of day-in, day-out commitment.
That was truly a puzzler of a trade since TNT did not have a solid center but they had Jason Castro and RR Pogoy.
And the biggest puzzler is this one: why don’t Silicon Valley companies suffer the same governmental scrutiny and regulation as their counterparts in other industries?
An ideal experience for anyone new to VR, Arca’s Path is an atmospheric puzzler that’s both intuitive and comfortable to play.
For each puzzler, one correct answer was chosen at random, with the winner receiving a $26 gift certificate to the Car Talk store, referred to as the "Shameless Commerce Division".
Reception Loyd is widely acknowledged as one of America's great puzzle-writers and popularizers, often mentioned as the greatest— Martin Gardner called him "America's greatest puzzler", and The Strand in 1898 dubbed him "the prince of puzzlers".
The hosts gave instructions to listeners to write answers addressed to "Puzzler Tower" on some non-existent or expensive object, such as a "$26 bill" or an advanced digital SLR camera.