Interesting, but eventually I gave up on it. The pieces are too regular, they snap together sideways, I finally figured out, but do not hold reliably. I did put the edges together, after realizing that I could at least determine which were vertical and which were horizontal. But with the color sameness in range, and variation according to angle of view, I decided it would be more work than play, and probably crazy-making. Nice try, but no.
Neat concept. Pretty difficult to work.
I have never tried a lenticular puzzle, and maybe they are all this difficult. The quality of the pieces is top-notch (crisply cut, snaps together well). I just had a lot of trouble figuring out how to do a lenticular puzzle.
We do puzzles often (our favorites are 500 pieces). So I was intrigued by this puzzle. What is a lenticular puzzle? In my teen's words: "It looks different depending on the angle you view it from." I thought this would be EASY to put the planets together, but in actuality, the border, mountains and sky came first! The hardest was fitting the planets / balloons together. One caveat - all the inside pieces are one of 2 similar shapes - either a horizontal piece or vertical piece, so you MUST have a good eye for color and patterns. This was a fun and moderately difficult puzzle. Not easy. Perfect challenge for teens and young adults without taking weeks to solve (it's 300 pieces not 1,000). I attached a combined picture with a few different angles shown - same puzzle in all of them!
This is such a pretty puzzle and it is pretty challenging, not for a beginner in my opinion. The colors are so nice and the pieces fit together well (not as tight as lenticular puzzles I've done from other brands). Because it is a lenticular puzzle it is a more challenging puzzle. You have to find the right angle to view each piece to know where to place it so putting this puzzle together is very different from a regular puzzle.