Wei-Hwa Huang
Wei-Hwa Huang (born August 4, 1975 in Eugene, Oregon)[1] is an American puzzler, member of the US Team for the World Puzzle Championship,[2] and game designer.[3]
Huang was a member of the United States International Math Olympiad team in 1992 and 1993, where he was awarded a Silver Medal both years. He was a Putnam Fellow in 1993.[4] Huang has won the annual World Puzzle Championship on four occasions: 1995 and 1997–1999.[5][6] He also won the 2008 Sudoku National Championship.[7] With team Left Out, he won the 2019 MIT Mystery Hunt.[8]
With Tom Lehmann, Huang designed the board game Roll for the Galaxy released in 2014 by Rio Grande Games. Roll for the Galaxy is a dice-based adaption of the award-winning card game Race for the Galaxy with deck-building mechanics. Huang and Lehmann also designed Roll for the Galaxy: Ambition, an expansion released in 2015. Roll for the Galaxy was nominated for three Golden Geek Awards and an International Gamers Award.[9]
Huang graduated from Montgomery Blair High School[10] and the California Institute of Technology[11] and was an employee at Google until July 2008.[12] One of his most famous projects was the Da Vinci Code Quest on Google, which was a set of 24 puzzles launched on April 17, 2006, in cooperation with Columbia Pictures.[13]
Huang submitted a crossword puzzle to The New York Times newspaper which was published on Tuesday, September 10, 2002.[14] In 2012, Huang co-authored a book with Will Shortz, the editor of The New York Times crossword puzzle.[15]
Huang is an investor and co-producer of the Broadway musical The Lightning Thief.[16]
References
[edit]- ^ "My Puzzling Life" by Wei-Hwa, 1998 Newsletter of World Puzzle Federation, p.3
- ^ Grossman, Lev (Mar 11, 2013). "The Answer Men". TIME Magazine.
- ^ "Wei-Hwa Huang's Board Game Designer Page at BoardGameGeek".
- ^ "Putnam Competition Individual and Team Winners". Mathematical Association of America. Retrieved December 14, 2021.
- ^ "World Puzzle Championship - WPC History". wpc.puzzles.com.
- ^ Spice, Byron (1999-10-25). "Prince of Puzzles". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: A6.
- ^ Shapiro, Howard (2009). "2009 Inquirer Sudoku National Championship: Third time's the charm for L.A. woman". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 30 September 2014.
- ^ "MIT Mystery Hunt 2019 Wrapup". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-13.
- ^ "Roll for the Galaxy at BoardGameGeek".
- ^ "Montgomery Has 3 In Westinghouse's Top 10 Finalists". The Washington Post. 1993-03-09. pp. B7.
- ^ "Puzzlement". The New York Times: Section 6, Page 14. 1995-11-12.
- ^ Yi-Wyn Yen and Michal Lev-Ram (January 22, 2008). "10 fascinating Googlers". Fortune.
- ^ "The Da Vinci Code Quest Launches On Google". www.movieweb.com.
- ^ Shortz, Will (June 16, 2005). The New York Times Will Shortz's Greatest Hits: 150 Crossword Puzzles Personally Picked by the Puzzlemaster. p. 64. ISBN 031234242X.
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ignored (help) - ^ Will Shortz and Wei-Hwa Huang (September 18, 2012). Will Shortz's Puzzle Master Workout. Seven Footer Press. ISBN 978-1934734520.
- ^ "Wei-Hwa Huang at Playbill".
External links
[edit]
- 1975 births
- California Institute of Technology alumni
- Google employees
- Living people
- American people of Taiwanese descent
- American game designers
- Artists from California
- Puzzle designers
- People from Silver Spring, Maryland
- American people of Chinese descent
- International Mathematical Olympiad participants
- Putnam Fellows
- Game stubs