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  2. Tesseract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesseract

    In geometry, a tesseract or 4-cube is a four-dimensional hypercube, analogous to a two-dimensional square and a three-dimensional cube. [1] Just as the perimeter of the square consists of four edges and the surface of the cube consists of six square faces, the hypersurface of the tesseract consists of eight cubical cells, meeting at right angles.

  3. List of four-dimensional games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_four-dimensional_games

    Four-Dimensional Maze: maze: Christos Jonathan Seth Hayward 1989 ? Java: 2D sections: No Frac4d: puzzle: Per Bergland, Max Tegmark: 1990 Proprietary? 3D sections: No [20] Hipercubo: puzzle: Studio Avante 2010 Proprietary? perspective projection: No [21] Hyper: first-person: Greg Seyranian, Barb Krug, Geraldine Laurent, Scott Richman, Philippe ...

  4. Hypercube - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypercube

    In geometry, a hypercube is an n-dimensional analogue of a square (n = 2) and a cube (n = 3); the special case for n = 4 is known as a tesseract.It is a closed, compact, convex figure whose 1-skeleton consists of groups of opposite parallel line segments aligned in each of the space's dimensions, perpendicular to each other and of the same length.

  5. 4-polytope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4-polytope

    The convex regular 4-polytopes are the four-dimensional analogues of the Platonic solids. The most familiar 4-polytope is the tesseract or hypercube, the 4D analogue of the cube. The convex regular 4-polytopes can be ordered by size as a measure of 4-dimensional content (hypervolume) for the same radius.

  6. Four-dimensional space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four-dimensional_space

    Four-dimensional space (4D) is the mathematical extension of the concept of three-dimensional space (3D). Three-dimensional space is the simplest possible abstraction of the observation that one needs only three numbers, called dimensions, to describe the sizes or locations of objects in the everyday world.

  7. Regular 4-polytope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_4-polytope

    Each convex regular 4-polytope is bounded by a set of 3-dimensional cells which are all Platonic solids of the same type and size. These are fitted together along their respective faces (face-to-face) in a regular fashion, forming the surface of the 4-polytope which is a closed, curved 3-dimensional space (analogous to the way the surface of ...

  8. Miegakure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miegakure

    Miegakure (Japanese: 見え隠れ, Hepburn: Miegakure, "in and out of sight") is an in-development puzzle-platform video game by Marc ten Bosch set in a world with four spatial dimensions.

  9. Hyperoctahedral group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperoctahedral_group

    There is a notable index two subgroup, corresponding to the Coxeter group D n and the symmetries of the demihypercube.Viewed as a wreath product, there are two natural maps from the hyperoctahedral group to the cyclic group of order 2: one map coming from "multiply the signs of all the elements" (in the n copies of {}), and one map coming from the parity of the permutation.