Something interesting I did in Turbowarp. I saw Wrath of Math complaining about this math puzzle on YouTube so I immediately set out to brute-force it. After successfully doing so I found that Scratch is very capable of doing this problem despite there being around 362880 combinations of potential answers (I think), because there are 128 valid solutions to the puzzle. This means 1 out of every 2835 combinations work as solutions. If you use this project to calculate the solutions you can see it evens out at 128, and arriving at the solutions does not take 90 days as Wrath of Math claims. Who would of thunk!