Each coin has four quadrants of dots/lines. Rather than making sure the whole coin looks identical to the middle one, you only need to replicate the two quadrants it "touches". For instance - look at the top coin and middle coin. The middle coin has 2 dots on the left, 4 dots on the right. You just need to rotate the top coin until it's also 2 dots on the left, 4 dots on the right. The other quadrants don't matter as it's only the sides "touching" the middle one.
@@jilliannguyen2845 that's so stupid and doesn't make any sense. The one with four dots doesn't align with the lines in the quadrant that it "touches" Literally the dumbest puzzle ever. Major dislike.
The clock's little hand was on the 12 While the big hand was on the 8 The big hand counts by 1, and every number equals 5 ona clock (which has little tick marks) The small hand counts the whole number and ignores the tick marks.
@@disconator2789 You sure about that? if it's 12 40, the small hand would have been a little over pass the number 12, do you know how to read analog clocks?