Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Killer sudoku (also killer su doku, sumdoku, sum doku, sumoku, addoku, or samunanpure サムナンプレ sum-num(ber) pla(ce)) is a puzzle that combines elements of sudoku and kakuro. Despite the name, the simpler killer sudokus can be easier to solve than regular sudokus, depending on the solver's skill at mental arithmetic ; the hardest ones ...
The number game Sudoku appeared in early issues of Nikoli. [7] He formulated the name "Sudoku" while he was scrambling to get to a horse race. [ 4 ] [ 10 ] He shortened it from Suuji wa dokushin ni kagiru ("numbers should be single") at the urging of his fellow workers. [ 10 ]
The world's first live TV Sudoku show, held on July 1, 2005, Sky One. The world's first live TV Sudoku show, Sudoku Live, was a puzzle contest first broadcast on July 1, 2005, on the British pay-television channel Sky One. It was presented by Carol Vorderman. Nine teams of nine players (with one celebrity in each team) representing geographical ...
Articles relating to Sudoku, the logic-based placement puzzle. Subcategories. This category has the following 3 subcategories, out of 3 total. ...
A Sudoku whose regions are not (necessarily) square or rectangular is known as a Jigsaw Sudoku. In particular, an N × N square where N is prime can only be tiled with irregular N -ominoes . For small values of N the number of ways to tile the square (excluding symmetries) has been computed (sequence A172477 in the OEIS ). [ 10 ]
A Sudoku variant with prime N (7×7) and solution. (with Japanese symbols). Overlapping grids. The classic 9×9 Sudoku format can be generalized to an N×N row-column grid partitioned into N regions, where each of the N rows, columns and regions have N cells and each of the N digits occur once in each row, column or region.
Web Sudoku is an online sudoku website which was rated as one of the best 50 fun and games website by Time. [1] It was founded by Gideon Greenspan and Rachel Lee. [2] The website was rated as the 7265th best website in the world by Jonathan Harchick in his book The World's Best Websites. [3]
Numbrix puzzles, which appear in Parade magazine, are similar to Hidato except diagonal moves are not allowed. [9] (vos Savant has only used 7×7 and 9×9 grids). [10]Jadium puzzles (formerly Snakepit puzzles), created by Jeff Marchant, are a more difficult version of Numbrix with fewer given numbers and have appeared on the Parade web site regularly since 2014, along with a daily online ...