
Irons in the Fire – Bepuzzled – 135 pieces
Normally “mystery” puzzles aren’t my thing. Not because I don’t care for the mystery aspect of it, but because almost every single one I’ve ever done or looked at has had terrible quality. This was a thrift store purchase though, and for some reason I was willing to take a chance on it this time.
It’s a good thing too, because this is the best quality puzzle from this brand that I’ve ever seen. The pieces were thick (like, Ravensburger thick) and fit together well, if slightly loosely. It’s a double-sided puzzle, so one side is shinier and feels a little more stiff; but that is how double-sided puzzles are, no matter the brand. Overall, the quality was impressive.
**I’m going to say that I’ve done a few Bepuzzled puzzles before, and my impression is that overall the quality is underwhelming, and at times REALLY bad. My opinion is only for this puzzle, not the brand.**
Here’s the mystery…. Four business partners are golfing; Howie, Will, Flip, and Duff. Someone has been selling company secrets and a private detective has been hired by Howie to find out who. Howie gets attacked and kidnapped after the round of golf, and what is found is the following picture. (There’s much more info to the story, but this is the gist of it)

I’m giving the solution below, so stop reading here if you have this puzzle and don’t want any spoilers.
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What the police found was everything in disarray, but four clubs laid out neatly in a row next to his open cell phone. The 3, 5, 4, and 7 irons in a row – using the number/letter combinations on the phone – spell out who was stealing company secrets and who arranged to have Howie taken.
Flip.
I agree – mystery puzzles are not for me either. I did one about 15 years ago and I said uh-uh. I’m glad you did this so I don’t have to! 😄
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Always happy to take one for the team. LOL
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How cool amd clever is this puzzle?
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Glad you liked it!
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I like it! Also, not all mystery puzzles are poor quality, there is the Ravensburger Escape-series, for example. I also count Wasgij- and What if-puzzles as mystery puzzles.
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I meant mystery as in you have to solve the story – they’re not the “mystery” puzzles I was referring to. Haven’t tried the Escape series, but I love the Wasgij and What If puzzles; they’re both fabulous quality.
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The Escape series requires you to solve puzzles to identify solution pieces, so they’re definitely more like this one.
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Well then, I stand corrected. I will revise my statement that most mystery puzzles have bad quality. I guess I’m going to need to find and solve an Escape puzzle. 🤔
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Pretty cool.
I like the mystery aspect of it.
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Glad you enjoyed the post. 😊
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