This is a classic puzzle from Boris Kordemsky’s 1972 Moscow Puzzles.
“Purrer has decided to take a nap. He dreams he is encircled by 13 mice: 12 gray and 1 white. He hears his owner saying: “Purrer, you are to eat each thirteenth mouse, keeping the same direction. The last mouse you eat must be the white one.” Which mouse should he start from [eat first]?”
See Cat and Mice for a solution.
The Josephus Problem
This famous Josephus Problem presented on Youtube is somewhat different from the Cat and Mice puzzle, but still has similarities. An article by Jay Bennett discussing the problem was published in Popular Mechanics in 2016.
Penn and Teller – Spelling Cards
It turns out that Penn and Teller have performed another magic trick recently that is based on mathematical principles and so is more or less self-working. It is a more complicated version of the Cat and Mice puzzle, which I have dubbed the “Spelling Cards” trick. Continue reading

This is a fun
This is another intimidating
This is an interesting problem from the Canadian Mathematical Society’s 2001 Olymon.
Thanks to Futility Closet I discovered a new source of math puzzles:
This is another simple problem from the 2025 Math Calendar.
A while ago James Tanton provided a series of puzzles:
This is a puzzle from
This is another