As it turns out, as difficult as the Gliding Cube puzzle appears, masters of twisty puzzles of the world do not find it hard at all. We have received answers and solutions for all the problems that are posted on the Brain Teasers page. Many of the fans who solve the puzzle believe Gliding Cube is easier to solve than Rubik's Cube because sliding move on GC is less restrictive than spin move on Rubik's Cube.


The conclusion is: the entire pattern set of the Rubik's Cube puzzle is a subset of that of Gliding Cube, and we can create all possible color patterns on the cube by sliding moves only.


For best viewing, it is strongly recommended that both reverse mirrors be turned on.


 Switching two tiles:

1. Algorithm by Chris Hardwick.

2. Algorithm by Justin Wright, a 21 year old student from Houston, Texas of the United States.


 Solutions for 3x3x3:

1. See how Ton Dennenbroek solve this 3x3x3 puzzle elegantly.

2. Solution by Justin Wright for this 3x3x3 puzzle.

3. Solution by David Salvia for this 3x3x3 puzzle.


 Solutions for 10x10x10:

1. Layer approach by Chris Hardwick for this puzzle in 3020 steps.

2. Center approach by Chris Hardwick for this puzzle in 3621 steps.

3. Face by face approach by Grant Tregay for this puzzle in 3145 steps.

4. Layer approach by Daniel Hayes, 20 year old from Yukon, Okalahoma of the United States, for this puzzle in 2737 steps.