This edition of TMBR is in progress and has not yet been released. Please add any notes you think may be relevant (including in the form a of a TODO with a link to any relevant Discord discussion).
There have been two specific BB domain themed months: BB(3,3) month (October) and BB(2,5) month (November). For BB(3,3), this resulted in the clarification of some of the results and techniques on the Discord and Wiki. LegionMammal wrote up a detailed explanation of the probvious halter, see Discord. No further progress on holdouts was made in October due to the limited number of holdouts and the work that's already been put into trying to solve them. For BB(2,5), it was verified that the Wiki was up to date. @mxdys shared some of his old notes on the unanalyzed machines, see source.
Misc
Discord user Vonhust made a Macro Machine achieving 2 billion steps / s, and is planning even more optimizations. TODO: Sources, details, graph.
BB Adjacent
All Fractran deciders summarized and their relations, shared by Daniel Yuan on 14 Nov 2025Busy Beaver for Fractan, or BBf was introduced on 1 Nov by Jason Yuen, who also solved the first 14 values. Then, all values up to 19 were solved, with 19 requiring 3 programs to be proven by hand. For n = 20, 34 holdouts remain, while for n = 21, 587 holdouts are remaining. Three BB-Cryptids were also transformed into Fractran programs, so we know that n = 29 requires solving Hydra.
Cyclic Tag was introduced by Discord user Jack on 14 Nov. The first two values, n = 1 and 2 were also solved by him. Then, lower bounds were given for values up to n = 7. CTBB(7) reaches hexation.
At the end of the month, @mxdys released a holdouts list consisting of only 1416 holdout TMs. A total of 118 holdouts were solved. 88 by a new FAR method, created by mxdys. 30 more by 14 new individual proofs by mxdys and 16 informal proofs verified.
A new holdouts list was created by Robin Rovenszky via searching the Discord server for any results on TMs. This spreadsheet thus includes every informal result alongside verified results.
The code provided by mxdys breaks up the BB(2,7) enumeration into 1 million subtasks which each run for ~10 minutes and leave ~2500 holdouts based on an average of the first 1K subtasks. These values are about 5 times longer than and 25 times larger than the ones for BB(7).
Terry Ligocki enumerated the first 3 subtasks, resulting in 88,730,540 holdouts, which can be found here.
The expected number of holdouts after the enumeration is ~3B TMs.