Who is the inventor of the magic cube?

Take a look at this, it may be helpful to you!

Rubik's Cube is also called the Magic Cube, also known as the Rubik's Cube. It was invented by Professor Erno Rubik of the Budapest School of Architecture in Hungary in 1974. When he invented the Rubik's Cube, he did not intend it to be put into production and entertainment. Because he is a professor of architecture and sculpture, he made the first prototype of the Rubik's Cube by himself to help students understand the composition and structure of the space cube and to exercise students' spatial thinking ability and memory. Just for this simple purpose, he completed his first work. But you have to know that making a Rubik's Cube is not simple. Making those small cubes can rotate at will without falling apart is not only a mechanical problem, but also involves the wooden axis. , seats and tenons, etc. After a long period of hard work, he overcame the above problems - in 1974, the world's first Rubik's Cube came out! .When he took the Rubik's Cube in his hand and accidentally turned it a few times, he found that the original neat Rubik's Cube was difficult to restore, so he realized that this new invention would be very difficult. But he didn't expect that this toy with a side length of less than 6 centimeters would become popular all over the world in the future, and there would even be sports using the Rubik's Cube as a prop.

After that, Professor Rubik and his partners discovered huge business opportunities and began to mass-produce Rubik's Cube toys. The Rubik's Cube quickly conquered the world with its unique magic power and achieved amazing sales. An unprecedented miracle in the toy industry. After that, the Rubik's Cube won three awards in one fell swoop, namely "The Most Educational Toy", "The Best Game Invention Award in 1980" and "One of the 100 Most Influential Inventions of the 20th Century". He also invented the second-level and fourth-level Rubik's Cube successively, which were also successful. As the inventor of the Rubik's Cube, Professor Rubik holds Hungarian patent number #170062, but has not applied for an international patent. (He thought others would be reluctant to produce the toy, but clones appeared almost immediately).