Usually, a maze has a specific range, and if conditions allow, heading in one direction should always bring you to an edge.
Once the concept of an "edge" is confirmed, you have a reference coordinate, and the same method can be used to confirm a few other edges, usually leading to the correct path.
But gradually, he realized that something was seriously wrong.
Along the way, Leonard Churchill made many kinds of marks.
Thanks to his photographic memory, he was forming a map in his mind as he walked.
To prevent his brain from being interfered with, he was also constantly sketching drafts in his notebook.
No matter whether the labyrinth was flat or cube-shaped like the previous "Grand Cemetery Labyrinth," this method was universally applicable.
Normally, in a maze, he felt he might choose certain paths and end up going in circles.
Then he would see the marks he had left before.
But after walking for an hour, Leonard Churchill had not found any marks he had left.