Going to try creating some cryptics. Trialing this size first, which should be a balance of good crosses and short solve time. Enjoy! And please let me know in the comments if a clue is off— this is new to me!
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LETS GOOO ELLE !!! this was so much fun. this was the first cryptic i had a chance at. i got stuck on CUE, LATTE, and BELTS which i thought was BLISS. i loooved NIL, ALIENLIFE, and ANECDOTAL. THANK YOU !! make more of these sometime pls
No its a lamentation on how the gap keeps widening between me and the rest of you geniuses and how my "ability" to do puzzles has completely deteriorated... I tried to spoiler it to stop from being too negative, but like me it was of no use
I think in general the across clues work better than the down ones - 4D in particular is a shocker (indirect anagram of ET AL with unindicated homophone "tea" = T??) and I can't work out 9D at all!
7D though has a lovely adjective/noun switch on "prompt" which makes it my favourite clue in the puzzle.
o yeah I gotta mention 2D as well. Cryptic setters have to give scrupulously fair definitions (because they get to be sneaky in every other respect,) and DEBT (a noun) can never mean OWE (a verb.) Heads have rolled for less
OWE to "Rowen takes his clothes off, need to pay (3)"
LATTE to "Extract flattering coffee, perhaps (5)"
GUIDE to "Lead mentor (5)"
Do they work?
Also, should device indicators always be in 3rd person present tense? e.g. Could I instead write "Rowen took his clothes off" to help the surface reading?
Thanks for the feedback! Hmm, I thought things like "oh" = O were fair game. 9D Wild (scramble) budgie holding a bee (BUDGIE - B = UDGIE) to get advisor (GUIDE)
Cryptic-land is weird sometimes, but if you can justify something by reference to a reputable dictionary, you're usually on safe ground. For this reason "Uniform = U" is completely fine (thanks to NATO,) and "bend" = U is considered alright, because apparently "U" can mean "anything shaped like a U", but "You = U" is considered objectionable because there's no dictionary entry. It would have to be "You heard", "You said", "You texted", or some other such thing.
"Oh" = "O" seems safer, though - Merriam Webster gives "O - interjection - less common spelling of Oh" - but again this is based on a dictionary definition, rather than "oh" just sounding like the letter O.
Very entertaining!
I loved 7D because it mislead me for some time!
5D I try to avoid acronyms in cryptic crosswords.
8A "Age sneers" is a nice anagram of "eagerness" and would give a more satisfying surface.
12A Definition by example - a question mark is useful as an indicator.