Click on the green flag and watch this Rubik's cube solve on its own, with no help! The thick black borders show which side is turning and what is moving. If the whole cube has a thick outline, the front side is turning. Please don't accuse me of hacking this cube and type "lawr xolpd" in the comments. Thanks! On May 25, 2020, I joined Scratch. That same day, I shared my very first* Scratch project, "Self-Solving Rubik's Cube!" But that project was honestly kind of bad. It wasn't even a real solver, it just showed one side and kept showing a random color on every square and changing it, until at one point, they suddenly all turned green. The code was messy, and don't even get me started on the thumbnail. It was bad, but I didn't really realize that for a long time. Two weeks later, I made a sequel: A 4x4 version. This one was a little bit better but ultimately was just the same thing, just with more squares. And the music trimming was terrible. Around January 1st of this year, I passed 200 followers. So yes, I know that I'm over 2.5 months late, but anyway, I wanted to make a 200 followers special, but I just wasn't sure what to make. But recently, I got the idea to make this. It seemed like the PERFECT idea, so that's what I did. I greatly improved it from the original one. Although it only shows one side, I specifically made the cube "turn", and there's even a scrambling and solving process. It also now has the black lines between the squares, making it look like a proper Rubik's cube. It still might not be an actual solver, but I'm proud of this project. This is actually my very first project shared in 2022, so yeah, I'll try to be a little more active this year, but I've mostly moved on from Scratch at this point. *It wasn't the first project I ever made. Before I joined Scratch, I had probably made over 300 projects in total, many of which I never saved, but I made them. It was just the first one I made after I joined Scratch, and the first one I shared. Also, the original version of "Self-Solving Rubik's Cube!" was not my original idea. It was actually inspired by a similar project that I had once randomly seen somewhere on Scratch. I have no idea who made it, but whoever it is, I would like to give them credit. If you read this far, you must really love reading! So here's something to say to you: Never gonna give you up, never gonna let you down, never gonna run around and dessert you!