Cubzor

Entrenador de algoritmos

Domina algoritmos OLL y PLL con repetición espaciada y respuesta inmediata

Cargando datos de entrenamiento...

Cómo usar el entrenador de OLL y PLL

El entrenador sirve para apoyar la práctica real, no para reemplazar el aprendizaje. Úsalo después de leer el caso, revisar la notación y entender el patrón que quieres reconocer.

Qué practica este entrenador

Usa el entrenador para repasar algoritmos de OLL y PLL, escribir los movimientos de memoria y comparar tu respuesta con la solución guardada del caso. Está pensado para practicar la última capa una vez que ya entiendes la notación básica.

Cómo ayuda la repetición espaciada

Los casos que fallas aparecen con más frecuencia y los dominados con menos. Así las sesiones cortas siguen siendo útiles sin tener que repasar el set completo de OLL o PLL cada vez.

Reconocimiento antes que velocidad

Empieza con 2-Look OLL, 2-Look PLL o los sets esenciales. Aprende primero el patrón visual y luego practica el algoritmo despacio hasta que la secuencia gatillo se sienta firme.

Sesiones de práctica enfocadas

Elige sesiones cortas para el repaso diario o más largas cuando aprendas un set nuevo. El progreso se guarda localmente en tu navegador, así que no necesitas cuenta.

Training guide

How to build reliable OLL and PLL recall

Use the trainer as a review system around the algorithm libraries, not as a guessing game. Small case sets, visible recognition cues, and slow follow-up practice make the sessions more useful.

Start with a small case set

The fastest way to make the trainer useful is to narrow the session. Choose 2-look OLL, 2-look PLL, essentials, or a focused set before attempting the full 57 OLL or 21 PLL cases.

A small set lets you separate two skills: recognizing the pattern and recalling the algorithm. If both are weak at the same time, the session becomes guessing instead of training.

Use recognition before typing speed

Look at the case shape first: headlights, bars, blocks, diagonal swaps, oriented edges, or corner patterns. Say the case name or pattern out loud before typing the algorithm.

When you miss a case, do not only memorize the final answer. Read the recognition tip, compare it with the OLL or PLL library, and identify the feature that should have triggered the case.

How spaced repetition should feel

Missed cases should return more often than mastered cases. That is intentional. The goal is not a perfectly even tour through every algorithm; the goal is to spend time where recall is weakest.

If a case keeps returning, slow down and practice it outside the trainer for a few repetitions. Then come back and test whether you can recognize it without looking at notes.

Connecting trainer work to real solves

A trainer session is complete only when the case transfers back to a cube solve. After a focused session, open practice mode, scramble, and watch for the same recognition pattern during a full solve.

For physical cube practice, drill the algorithm slowly enough that every trigger feels clean. Fast but unstable turning usually creates more last-layer mistakes than it fixes.

Before starting a trainer session

  • Read the OLL or PLL case before drilling it.
  • Choose a small session length when learning new cases.
  • Name the visual pattern before typing the moves.
  • Review every missed case instead of skipping straight to the next one.
  • Move difficult cases back to slow simulator or physical-cube practice.
  • End the session with one full solve so the case appears in context.

Frequently asked questions

Should beginners use the algorithm trainer?

Use it after you understand basic notation and can solve the cube with a beginner method. If notation is still confusing, start with the notation guide and beginner guide first.

Should I learn full OLL before full PLL?

Most cubers get more practical value from 2-look OLL, 2-look PLL, full PLL, then full OLL. Full PLL has fewer cases and appears in every CFOP solve.

Why does the trainer ask for typed algorithms?

Typing forces exact recall. It catches missing primes, missing double turns, and swapped triggers that might feel familiar but fail when repeated on a cube.

How long should one session be?

Ten to twenty cases is enough for daily review. Longer sessions are useful when you already know the set, but they can become tiring when you are learning new recognition patterns.

What should I do with a case I keep missing?

Open the matching library entry, read the recognition note, turn the algorithm slowly several times, and then return to the trainer. Repeating misses without review rarely fixes the cause.

Can I use alternate algorithms?

The trainer checks against stored answers, so alternate algorithms may not always be accepted. Use the library pages to compare alternatives and keep one primary algorithm for recall practice.

Does local progress sync across devices?

No. Trainer progress is stored locally in the browser. That keeps the trainer lightweight and account-free, but a different browser or device starts with a separate progress history.

How do I know a case is mastered?

A case is useful in real solves when you can recognize it quickly, turn the algorithm without pauses, and recover if the cube is held from the wrong angle. Trainer accuracy is one signal, not the whole goal.