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A website to hold puzzle hunts like the MIT Mystery Hunt

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madjaqk/puzzle_master_v2

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Puzzle Master (v2)

This project uses Python 3.6 and Django 2.0

Getting Started

Clone the repo, install requirements, python manage.py makemigrations and python manage.py migrate, then python manage.py loaddata puzzle_data.json to add the existing puzzles to the database. (Warning: The puzzle_data.json file includes spoilers for some puzzles.)

This project uses python-decouple to hide secret data from version control, so make sure you've created a .env file at root level with at the very least a secret key. (You can find more examples in the .env-example file). You may also need to comment out some of the OAuth values from settings.py (pretty much everything that starts with SOCIAL_AUTH_), at least at first.

The most important model is Puzzle. Hopefully, most of the fields are self-explanatory, but some of the more obscure ones:

  • short_name is specifically the file name for the template to render to show that puzzle, minus the .html.
  • meta_order is used to set the order that all of the puzzles in a given meta will be displayed when using the as_ul template tag. If blank, the puzzles will be sorted alphabetically by title, ignoring articles.
  • metapuzzles is a many-to-many, non-symmetric self-join. Note that this allows a puzzle to belong to multiple metapuzzles (as in the Emotions round of the 2018 MIT Mystery Hunt) and for multiple metas to be part of a supermeta.

The PuzzleSet model controls what's shown on the main page (index.html, the puzzles:index route). Every puzzle set (regardless of how many puzzles, metas, or layers of nested metas there are) should have its own directory in templates and static, with a style.css in the latter.

To-Do

Some possible ideas for improvements:

  • Changing answer submission to AJAX seems straightforward enough.
  • As of now, correct answers are stored in the database in plain text. I'd rather they be encrypted, just to make hypothetical cheating that much harder; however, I also wanted to include a user's history of answer submissions in the clear (so they could be shown back to them), so the vulnerability's there regardless. It would avoid the spoilers in puzzle_data.json, at least.
  • Also in terms of hypothetical cheating: It would be neat to do some sort of rate limiting, so that a person can't submit every 20,000 answers a second and brute force "guess" the answer.
  • In the spirit of DRY, whether an answer is correct or not isn't saved directly in the database; rather, it's a method (technically a Python @property) that compares the submitted answer to the puzzle's saved answer. It might be more efficient to store that on the answer itself (or have a separate table tracking which users have solved which puzzles), but I haven't tested that yet.
  • It would be neat to add an unlock mechanism, where only some puzzles are available at first and solving those opens up new puzzles to solve, but I haven't made any sets large enough for that to be necessary.

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE.md file for details

Acknowledgments

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