
WCA Updates Head-to-Head Format and Misscramble Rules in April 2026 Regulations
New WCA Regulations effective April 1, 2026 refine misscramble handling and expand Head-to-Head events, including FMC and Multi-Blind.
Artikel lesenRekorde, Produktupdates und praktische Cube-Geschichten. Der Feed konzentriert sich auf das, was dir beim Folgen der Cubing-Welt oder beim Verbessern deiner Solves hilft.
Neuester Artikel
1. Mai 2026
12 Artikel
WCA

New WCA Regulations effective April 1, 2026 refine misscramble handling and expand Head-to-Head events, including FMC and Multi-Blind.
Artikel lesenEin fokussierter Feed für Rekorde, Produktupdates und Lernkontext.

At Kids America Christmas Clash OH 2025 in Coshocton, Ohio, American cuber Sujan Feist set a new 2x2x2 average world record of 0.86 seconds in the first round.

The World Cube Association has combined its Guidelines into a single Regulations document, a structural overhaul aimed at clarity and accessibility for all competitions starting July 17, 2025.

China’s Ziyu Ye set a blistering 0.39s 2×2×2 single at Hefei Open 2025 on October 25, eclipsing the previous 0.43s mark and redefining what’s possible in the Pocket Cube sprint.

On Oct 12 in Las Flores, CA, Max Park reset the 4x4x4 average world record to 18.74 seconds at Mission Viejo Fall 2025, edging Tymon Kolasiński’s 18.88.

New Zealand’s Lachlan Gibson set a 2.26-second Rubik’s Clock world record average in Auckland on August 16, 2025, capping a breakthrough year that also saw him claim the 1.53-second single.

On Oct 4 in Mission Viejo, Max Park set 7x7 single (1:33.48) and average (1:36.86) WRs and added a 6x6 average WR (1:05.04), capping a dominant big-cubes season.

In a late-October announcement, the World Cube Association named four host cities for 2026 continentals—signaling where the sport's growth and momentum are strongest.

Four Purdue engineering students built 'Purdubik's Cube,' a record-breaking robot that solves a Rubik's Cube faster than you can blink—completing the puzzle in just 0.103 seconds, nearly three times faster than the previous world record.

Polish speedcuber Tymon Kolasiński sets a new 5x5x5 average world record, ending Max Park's seven-year reign.

The European Union's General Court has annulled Spin Master's trademarks for the Rubik's Cube shape, siding with Greek rival Verdes Innovations SA.

Chinese prodigy Yiheng Wang secures the 3x3x3 title at the 2025 World Championship, solidifying his dominance in the speedcubing world.