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Infinity Morph Cube Improved Hinges 3D Printer File Image 1
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Infinity Morph Cube Improved Hinges

Eli Carling avatarEli Carling

March 3, 2026

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Boost MeTo support me and my future models

🔷 The Upgraded Infinity Cube — 12 Cubes, Not 8

You already know the infinity cube. You've seen it, you've flipped it, and after about 30 seconds you realized it only does one thing — loop back into itself. This is what happens when you take that concept and actually push it somewhere new.

This 12-cube version was redesigned from the ground up to do what the standard 8-cube never could — transform into multiple distinct flat shapes and 3D structures. It's not just a fidget anymore. It's a kinetic puzzle that lives on your desk and never runs out of new configurations to find.

✨ What's actually different from the 8-cube:

  • 12 cubes instead of 8: Those 4 extra cubes change everything. The standard 8-cube has one loop. This one has 124 unique fold paths — mathematically calculated and physically tested. That's not a marketing number, that's the actual count.
  • Three hinge types instead of one: The original infinity cube uses a single hinge type repeated over and over. This version uses top, bottom, and side hinges — each one placed deliberately so every fold moves freely without any hinge ever blocking another. It took a lot of iteration to get this right.
  • It doesn't just loop — it transforms: The 8-cube folds back into a rectangle every time. This one can hold dozens of distinct configurations — flat shapes, standing 3D structures, abstract forms. Every fold takes you somewhere the 8-cube physically cannot reach.
  • Wider folding range: Because the hinges operate on different axes, the cube can fold in multiple directions rather than just one. This is what gives it the ability to build shapes instead of just flipping.
  • Still print-in-place: No assembly, no screws, no headaches. Pop it off the build plate and start exploring immediately.
  • Zero Waste: Designed to print without supports — save that filament for more cubes!
  • Satisfying Thunk: The geometry is tuned to give a crisp, tactile snap with every fold so it never feels loose or sloppy.

💡 Pro Tips for the Best Experience

  1. The Break-in: After printing, run through a few dozen folds in every direction to clear out any micro-artifacts from the print. The hinges only get smoother and more satisfying with time — give it 10 minutes and it'll feel like a completely different object.
  2. Multicolor Magic: Use a filament swap or a Bambu AMS to hit each row of cubes in a different color. When this thing is mid-fold the color transitions look absolutely wild. Highly recommended.
  3. Stay at 100% scale: The three hinge types have specific clearances that are tuned for full size. Scale it down and the hinges may fuse or bind. Stick to 100% for the mechanical performance this was designed for.
  4. Explore deliberately: Unlike the 8-cube where you just flip, this one rewards slowing down. Try folding one section at a time and see what structure emerges — some of the best shapes are ones you'll stumble into.

This cube started as a question — what would an infinity cube look like if it was actually designed to make shapes instead of just loop? Everything about this version, the layout, the hinge placement, the fold order, was chosen to answer that question as completely as possible.

Tag Marker World in your prints. We genuinely want to see every shape you find because we haven't found them all yet either. If this cube hits different, leave a Boost and a rating — it helps Marker World keep pushing what a fidget toy can actually be. 🔷

License:

Standard Digital File License

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