Either this is really easy, or I’m a complete fool. I still don’t get it. Everytime I start to put in numbers, the number shows up in an unrelated 3x3 square on the other side of the puzzle. What is that about?
You have to get numbers 1 through 9 ( 0 is excluded) used ONLY ONCE in every row, column and 33 square. To fill in the blanks, observe what numbers have already been used up in a particular 33, row, and column.
Its a process of elimination.
Observe:
3
2
( ) 9 ( )
() ( ) 6 4 ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) 1
5 ( ) ( )
( )
( )
8
( )
With this simple ASCII fragment sudoku containing a row, column and 33 square, you can see the space with the asterisk is meant to be a 7. Using the process of elimination with other rows, columns, and 3*3s you can fill in all the blanks.
What do you mean the number “shows up” in an unrelated 3x3 square? The board should come with a certain number of pre-filled squares and no other numbers should “show up” during play except for the ones you fill in yourself.
As for how to play, you simply have to make sure that:
Well, you have to make sure each digit appears EXACTLY once in each row/column/box. So let’s say a row has 3 blank squares, and one of the missing numbers is 5. You can’t just slap a 5 down in any of those, because it might cause a column or box to end up having two 5’s, which is not allowed. Some of them are certainly easy, but most places that you find them will have difficulty ratings of some kind, so you can work your way up.
For the hard ones, the process of elimination leaves blank spaces with 2,3, or more possible solutions and no definite answers; you have to go eenie-meenie-miney-moe every other space and end up with repeating digits. :mad: