>>175918773>less of a logical puzzle and more of a logical leapThis. We're working from both ends of the puzzle and are missing information you would normally have.
1. One doll is exactly the same
Final. It must be Doll [A, B, C]
turns to
1. One doll must be exactly the same
2. Check for similar qualities (C has same dress frill)
3. ????
Final. Must be Doll [C]
Logically, though, you'd see
1. Dolls must be exactly the same.
2. Doll C has same dress frill
3. Doll C has opposite socks/gloves, dress is different, and is a cat. Therefore, cannot be Doll C.
4. Can't be Doll A, everything is different.
5. Can't be Doll B, only the gloves match.
Final. No answer???
The best straight logical conclusions I can get are:
1. One doll must be exactly the same
2. Same quality is C has the same dress frill
3. Gloves and socks are opposite color, maybe they're inverted qualities?
4. Arms and Legs are the same shape, so maybe this is true
5. C is still the best option, C must be answer
Final. Must be Doll [C]