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Poland’s CFGS VI Brzeziny spotlights Square-1, blindfolded and multi-blind events

A 33-person Brzeziny meet packed Square-1, blindfolded and multi-blind into one tight weekend, with every competitor a returner and no first-timers on the list.

Jamie Taylor··2 min read
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Poland’s CFGS VI Brzeziny spotlights Square-1, blindfolded and multi-blind events
Source: worldcubeassociation.org

CF Goes Sideways VI Brzeziny 2026 packed Square-1, 3x3 blindfolded, Megaminx and 3x3 multi-blind into a compact June 27-28 weekend at Miejski Dom Kultury w Brzezinach in Brzeziny, Poland. With a 33-person cap and a field made up entirely of 33 returners, the meet looked built for experienced solvers rather than first-time entrants.

The World Cube Association listed Franciszek Fidos, Jakub Hanuszkiewicz, Julia Dąbrowska, Krzysztof Bober, Mateusz Szwugier, Piotr Gabara and Szymon Gabara as organizers, with Dominika Warchoł and Krzysztof Bober as delegates. The registration page showed three represented regions, Poland, Slovakia and Ukraine, and the entry rules made the meet even more selective: 3x3x3 Multi-Blind carried its own competitor limit of 20, and competitors had to pay within 48 hours or lose their spot.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The Saturday timetable showed exactly where the weekend’s emphasis sat. Square-1 first round ran from 00:25 to 01:40, followed by 3x3 blindfolded first round from 01:40 to 02:45 and Megaminx first round from 02:45 to 04:20. After Square-1 final from 04:20 to 04:45, the schedule moved straight into 3x3x3 Multi-Blind final, Attempt 2, from 06:05 to 07:30, then 3x3 blindfolded second round from 07:40 to 08:25, Megaminx final from 08:25 to 08:50, and 3x3 blindfolded final from 08:50 to 09:10. That layout kept the specialist events at the center of the day instead of tucking them into the margins.

The technical focus fit the event’s structure. Under World Cube Association regulations, 3x3x3 Multi-Blind requires special judging records for the number solved, the number attempted and the final time, a reminder that the event asks for a different kind of precision than standard speedsolving rounds. Brzeziny’s calendar also leaves room for a broader turnout later in the summer, with Cube Factory League Brzeziny 2026 set for August 8-9, a 150-competitor cap and a base registration fee of 95 zł. For this June weekend, though, the message was clear: the sharpest events were the point.

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