Pll - Algs ((new))

Swaps a pair of adjacent corners and the adjacent edges. Ja Permutation: Swaps the left-side corners and edges. Jb Permutation: Swaps the right-side corners and edges.

If your edges are solved but the corners are misplaced, you’re looking at these: : The classic triangular corner swaps.

So, you’ve mastered the cross, conquered F2L, and can navigate OLL with your eyes closed. Now you’re standing at the final frontier of the : PLL (Permutation of the Last Layer) .

Leo tried it. Slowly, clumsily. But on the third try, the corners clicked into place. “That’s… actually pretty,” he said. pll algs

PLL is the "speed" phase of the solve. While OLL has 57 algorithms, PLL's 21 are arguably more important to perfect because they finish the puzzle. High TPS on U-Perms, T-Perms, and J-Perms is what separates sub-15 solvers from sub-10 solvers. Prioritize recognition (Headlights vs. No Headlights) and smooth execution of triggers.

If you’re learning PLL algs:

These are the most frequent PLLs you will encounter. They move edges while keeping corners mostly intact. These are R/U-heavy and allow for very high TPS (Turns Per Second). Swaps a pair of adjacent corners and the adjacent edges

Don't just memorize the notation (e.g., ...). Look for "headlights," "1x2 blocks," or "2x2 blocks."

Leo was a good cuber. He could solve the first two layers with his eyes half-closed, and OLL felt like a dance he’d known forever. But PLL? That was where his solves went to cry.

These are among the fastest and most popular algorithms due to their ease of execution. If your edges are solved but the corners

“PLL algs aren’t chores,” he said. “They’re stories. And I just have to remember the characters.”

Don't learn them all at once. Start with the "easiest" ones, such as T, J, U, and H.

There are two R-perms (Ra, Rb). They are similar to G-perms but have a 1x2 block instead of a 2x2 block. Tip: Look for the 1x2 block. 5. The Swap Permutations (T, J, F, V, Y)