gdc here. So happy to see my puzzle solved here! Thanks Jaze for inventing this ruleset and thanks VikingPrime for the feedback on smoothing out the solve path (spoilers ahead).The intended solve path uses modular math to resolve box 5 - really impressive how quickly and accurately simon captured that.
The modular maths was nice for box 5. I concede I didn't clock that as quickly as Simon and ended up brute-forcing it a little bit, much preferred his / your version! Otherwise I found the solve path very smooth and enjoyable. I especially liked how it felt like solving most of a box and then getting a tiny thread peeking out of the fog begging to be pulled for the next box. Very well constructed gdc.
Those fog puzzles are really satisfying! And nicely streamline the solve path for people like me, who are terrible at scanning a full grid for the next tiny deduction. Solved it in 27:38 (Solve counter 922). Didn't cach the mod3 trick in the central box, but the lines and dots let you narrow down the options until there's only one possible arrangement of digits left :)
This channel is among the most wholesome, interesting, and satisfying on RUclips. Solving some of these puzzles is no small feat, but explaining them step by convoluted step without an ounce of pretense or condescension is astounding. I don't have the patience or skill for half these puzzles, but I will watch happily as long as these gentlemen post content. Thank you for doing what you do!
I LOVE fog of war! Basically every time. Generally encourages a more linear solve path, which I appreciate. Spent a while feeling stumped at the very beginning because I was accidentally trying to add up R6C6 and R7C6 to R5C6 rather than doing the opposite positions on the line. As soon as I realized that, the rest flowed very nicely. 27:27 solve time.
Whoa! I can't believe that I done it! Super good fog puzzle and very intuitive! The oppening was beautiful as you said! Thank you for the video Simon! 🤗
@@nmappraiser9926 At least there was no way for him to run away making his typical over complex digit resolution. Perk of fog puzzles I would say, especially one as clean as this.
Right after Simon start filling in candidates in box 4. I admit i did a bit of goodliffing (should that word be capitalized or not?) myself where i had not business filling in candidates yet.
These puzzles so oft kick my buns, But now I don't feel like a dunce. Staying calm and comported I got it all sorted And the puzzle was not broken once! (Leaves a virtual cupcake with a big happy face on it)
I really enjoyed this puzzle, I love the lilac colour. It took me much longer than Simon to solve though I’ve only been doing variant sudoku for a few weeks. It feels so good to do be able to do such a cool puzzle that’s difficult but not incredibly hard either 😀.
35:26 for me. Really nice solve path around the grid with just enough bread crumbs to give you the next deduction, though box 2's line probably gave me the hardest time in figuring out the next step. Great puzzle!
Loved this one! Tried figuring out the initial black dot stuff by pencilmarking, and when that failed did some maths since that was in the video title!
"One of these is a one, to complement the 8." Thanks to the "Positive Diagonal" puzzle earlier this week, I'm now imagining the 1 saying "Your figure looks great, 8!"
That was brilliant. I love fog puzzles and suspect that that would might have been harder without the fog because early on it is clear where you have to look.
Got off to a bit of a slow start, but did finally find my way through in a time of 29:17, really nice puzzle! Many thanks to gdc for a very cool fog puzzle!
Wow this was so nice to see. I did stop the video a few times to think it over. Can’t wait for some GAS version like this to practice and have fun. ❤😊😉
I finished in 50 minutes. This one was really fun. I quite enjoyed the search for the center in the fog. The logic flowed nicely from that thought. I did get lost searching the difference between an 8 or 9 on a center line before realizing that I had a 6 and 3 on each end, obviously indicating it was a 9. Great Puzzle!
Simon, this was an amazing puzzle and after solving it and watching you solve it I think I figured something out, fog of war puzzles are incredibly fun to solve because they help discover the logic behind the special rules of a puzzle, helping someone to learn and discover the incredible and fun interactions the rules create. So in short I think fog of war should be the new way people should be introduced to a new rule or logic in order to teach them how to spot the idea behind the absolute magic that this puzzle creates.
Picking myself up off the floor that i finally solved a puzzle faster than Simon did! Very nice logical flow, with always just enough to solve the next part
Brute forced the black dot zipper line as there were only 3 possibilities. As others mentioned it had a nice flow and some fun logic reaching into the fog for moving forward. (27:58 for me)
40:02 for me. I usually don't try to solve myself but I'm happy I did with this one. I missed the beautiful math logic at the beggining, but I loved the flow :)
Beautiful puzzle. Fresh and nice smoothly composed. So was a Simon’s solution. I love to see both Simon and Mark at their logic work, but (I hope, you are not offended with this comparison) the author is a composer, the solver - the conductor of the digit’s orchestra.
The funny thing is Simon was right about r6c3 being a 3 or 6. That was a clever break in, I asked if 9 was the second zipper center and it broke the puzzle because of the pressure the black dot was placing in the box. Then went through maximizing the centers because 9s were very restricted with the lines. Took me forever to fix the black dot in box 5 because I forgot about the zipper line rule. Then again at the end to break up the deadly pattern. All in all it was an easy puzzle and I enjoyed solving it. Took my a little under 56 minutes to solve. Edit: Watching Simon solve it made me realize how bad I am at spotting naked singles. The one in box 6 would have made my life a lot easier since that box is where I got stuck at for the longest time compared to the rest of the puzzle.
And Mark may be faster than Simon, but he can’t compete with how much Simon has fun singing the song. He loves it too, but without the same innate love for music and poetry.
Finished in 25:50. That was a very interesting ruleset, I enjoyed that a lot! Only made one significant error along the way (which the fog caught for me so I was able to backtrack and correct my logic).
Sometimes I think the option of switching to condensed rulesets would be helpful. For instance, this could be summed up as -Normal -Fog of war -Zipper lines --All 5 cells long --Orthogonal only --Can't share cells -Kropki dots For non-beginners, that's way easier to read and reference.
Can someone please explain me the logic around 29:00 in video? Why there is a confidence to use 34 pair and make it 7, but not 35, which makes it 8? both 35 and 17 are available for this line and I can't spot the exact reasoning why it was excluded for the sake of sum of 7. Thanks!
It's because of Row 9. Once the 3 is locked on the zipper, you get a three in the bottom-left of the grid which makes the bottom-right an 8. Then the 8 is no longer available for the centre of the zipper line and it becomes 7=3+4.
Simon states that we know the cells of the first zipper line from the start as the line continues into into r4c4 and r6c6 but there is nothing in the rules that states we know this? The zipper line is 5 cells *long* which means it's reasonable that a terminal cell on the line as the line run the full length along it without continuing?
I ended up giving up kinda early based off the nature of fog. In the central box, I did get the 1 and had the correct conclusions on the geometery of the first two lines, I somehow thought the line with the doubled digit would be larger and tried to put the 9 there and the 7 as the center of the other line. When the fog didn't clear, I realized it was wrong, and it just felt like it would be cheating to keep trying digits in the fog.
I usually just watch the solves on the channel instead of doing the puzzles myself, but decided to give this one a go. Took me about an hour, because I got seriously stuck in box 9, trying to figure out the new line and not realizing I could place 9 in the box. Really liked it though.
at the 50 minute mark, giving up and going "I'll just have to watch this video, I'm too stuck" and then I see this comment with the EXACT clue I needed to continue
I did way less maths to figure out the middle box. After you know the digit outside the box is 6 or 3 you can deduce that those can't be on the black dot. Then you can see that the bottom of the black dot can't add up to 9 with the digit outside the box. Then you can keep going the way you did.
If Mark's expertise is in linguistics, then maybe the title for the Sannaar game should be something like, "Professional Wordsmiths Play Chants of Sannaar" for that sweet clickbait.
That started it (the digit outside box9 not being a 1). [I forget the time-mark] But when you asked "Where is the 9 in box5,'' that immediately made me wonder wherever the 8 was. The "8" also only had two spots (either going with that ''1" or a 1 outside the box for a "9" in the center of a zipper line ) Being that outside cell is a "3,6," that means the "8" has to go with that "1" for "9" at its vertex/center. Perfect Hope Simon asks about the "8" soon. I did. Thanks, Simon.
ASK WHERE THE 8 GOES IN BOX5 if it's in the lefthand circle , it's going to displace the 9 (which would need an 8 for the "1") so it's not there. There are two places now (on a line needing a 1) That "36" outside box5, now means the 8 is with that "1" for a 9 at its vertex/center. Enough with the math(s), unless it'll lead you to the 7 @18:00 or so). Thanks again, Simon. Ask that question, though. It's much simpler
I got stuck and had to look at around 33:18 in the video to get back on track (I didn't notice there had to be a 5 on the white Kropki dot), but I was otherwise able to complete the puzzle in 45:12 on my own.
I made the same "mistake" with the 12 pair in box 9. It took me far too long and i felt really stupid afterwards. Well i guess nothing better than Sudoku to humble oneself
40 mins for me. Thanks. Also did I miss a setting. 3 in the corner gives me beep boop text (i think) rather than confetti. Is there a setting for this?
gdc here. So happy to see my puzzle solved here! Thanks Jaze for inventing this ruleset and thanks VikingPrime for the feedback on smoothing out the solve path (spoilers ahead).The intended solve path uses modular math to resolve box 5 - really impressive how quickly and accurately simon captured that.
lovely flow to this puzzle
Simon’s ability to break into puzzles is awe inspiring ❤
This was magnificent. Flow was superb, logical, challenging enough and perfect for the fog. Thank you gdc.
The modular maths was nice for box 5. I concede I didn't clock that as quickly as Simon and ended up brute-forcing it a little bit, much preferred his / your version! Otherwise I found the solve path very smooth and enjoyable. I especially liked how it felt like solving most of a box and then getting a tiny thread peeking out of the fog begging to be pulled for the next box. Very well constructed gdc.
Does gdc stand for anything?
Those fog puzzles are really satisfying! And nicely streamline the solve path for people like me, who are terrible at scanning a full grid for the next tiny deduction.
Solved it in 27:38 (Solve counter 922). Didn't cach the mod3 trick in the central box, but the lines and dots let you narrow down the options until there's only one possible arrangement of digits left :)
This channel is among the most wholesome, interesting, and satisfying on RUclips. Solving some of these puzzles is no small feat, but explaining them step by convoluted step without an ounce of pretense or condescension is astounding. I don't have the patience or skill for half these puzzles, but I will watch happily as long as these gentlemen post content. Thank you for doing what you do!
I LOVE fog of war! Basically every time. Generally encourages a more linear solve path, which I appreciate. Spent a while feeling stumped at the very beginning because I was accidentally trying to add up R6C6 and R7C6 to R5C6 rather than doing the opposite positions on the line. As soon as I realized that, the rest flowed very nicely. 27:27 solve time.
Simon’s break in was so much more elegant than mine! I basically went through the different options in my head to see if the black dot would break
Simons net time of 35 minutes is 3x faster than mine, and he takes the time to explain all his steps along the way which takes him longer!
The biggest surprise in this video is that Simon said the name "Alexis" twice at about the 5:52 mark and the machine didn't respond.
Whoa! I can't believe that I done it! Super good fog puzzle and very intuitive! The oppening was beautiful as you said! Thank you for the video Simon! 🤗
26:24 Simon: I must have made a mistake.
The Fog: I humbly disagree.
He got distracted by the 3 in the corner and forgot to continue solving the puzzle. Quite annoying, actually.
@@nmappraiser9926 At least there was no way for him to run away making his typical over complex digit resolution. Perk of fog puzzles I would say, especially one as clean as this.
Right after Simon start filling in candidates in box 4. I admit i did a bit of goodliffing (should that word be capitalized or not?) myself where i had not business filling in candidates yet.
22:45 ... can't get enough of that wonderful fog
NIce puzzle!
I wish i'll find a man someday, who will look at me, how Simon looks at these foggy puzzles 😅
These puzzles so oft kick my buns,
But now I don't feel like a dunce.
Staying calm and comported
I got it all sorted
And the puzzle was not broken once!
(Leaves a virtual cupcake with a big happy face on it)
Woot, nice ruleset and puzzle!! had a lot of fun and finished in 40:42
Thank you @MrGrog90 (gdc) and @Simon! Great to see this!
I really enjoyed this puzzle, I love the lilac colour. It took me much longer than Simon to solve though I’ve only been doing variant sudoku for a few weeks. It feels so good to do be able to do such a cool puzzle that’s difficult but not incredibly hard either 😀.
20:58
Really strong use of the zipper restrictions with the fog helping concentrate the mind into the right places.
35:26 for me. Really nice solve path around the grid with just enough bread crumbs to give you the next deduction, though box 2's line probably gave me the hardest time in figuring out the next step. Great puzzle!
Loved this one! Tried figuring out the initial black dot stuff by pencilmarking, and when that failed did some maths since that was in the video title!
"One of these is a one, to complement the 8."
Thanks to the "Positive Diagonal" puzzle earlier this week, I'm now imagining the 1 saying "Your figure looks great, 8!"
That was brilliant. I love fog puzzles and suspect that that would might have been harder without the fog because early on it is clear where you have to look.
Got it in 47 min. Fantastic puzzle, superb flow (as per usual on fog of war puzzles presented on this channel). Loved it!
Great puzzle gdc! Very wonderful and concise construction, not too few clues nor too many.
Cheers, 99% Sneaky
Simon's enthusiasm is off the charts :-D These videos are so positive, i love it :-)
42:50 is the Simon deduction of the video, instead of using the 1 in the column, Simon uses the sums after a lengthy deduction.
This is actually one of the few puzzles in this channel that I've been able to solve by my own. 50 minutes total. Lovely puzzle.
I can't believe this puzzle has more than 12,000 solves in just 12 days. I had a lot of fun doing it, as I can see many others did as well!
Got off to a bit of a slow start, but did finally find my way through in a time of 29:17, really nice puzzle! Many thanks to gdc for a very cool fog puzzle!
A fascinating puzzle, and an excellent solve.
Wow this was so nice to see. I did stop the video a few times to think it over. Can’t wait for some GAS version like this to practice and have fun. ❤😊😉
I finished in 50 minutes. This one was really fun. I quite enjoyed the search for the center in the fog. The logic flowed nicely from that thought. I did get lost searching the difference between an 8 or 9 on a center line before realizing that I had a 6 and 3 on each end, obviously indicating it was a 9. Great Puzzle!
the flow of this puzzle was amazing+
Simon, this was an amazing puzzle and after solving it and watching you solve it I think I figured something out, fog of war puzzles are incredibly fun to solve because they help discover the logic behind the special rules of a puzzle, helping someone to learn and discover the incredible and fun interactions the rules create.
So in short I think fog of war should be the new way people should be introduced to a new rule or logic in order to teach them how to spot the idea behind the absolute magic that this puzzle creates.
Yes, I really appreciate the "LOOK HERE" nature of them.
I love that every line broke down with different logic.
Picking myself up off the floor that i finally solved a puzzle faster than Simon did! Very nice logical flow, with always just enough to solve the next part
Brute forced the black dot zipper line as there were only 3 possibilities. As others mentioned it had a nice flow and some fun logic reaching into the fog for moving forward. (27:58 for me)
25:34 finish. Always love seeing math in my sudoku. Such fun!
can't wait to see zipper lines mixed with doublers or Schrodinger cells
40:02 for me. I usually don't try to solve myself but I'm happy I did with this one. I missed the beautiful math logic at the beggining, but I loved the flow :)
Beautiful puzzle. Fresh and nice smoothly composed. So was a Simon’s solution.
I love to see both Simon and Mark at their logic work, but (I hope, you are not offended with this comparison) the author is a composer, the solver - the conductor of the digit’s orchestra.
Fun! A couple cute bits of reasoning. 28:52
i got different 3 in the corner graphics, went deet ddet doot
I don't think this puzzle was too hard, but I made a right dog's breakfast of it at the start and much head-scratching occurred.
The funny thing is Simon was right about r6c3 being a 3 or 6. That was a clever break in, I asked if 9 was the second zipper center and it broke the puzzle because of the pressure the black dot was placing in the box. Then went through maximizing the centers because 9s were very restricted with the lines. Took me forever to fix the black dot in box 5 because I forgot about the zipper line rule. Then again at the end to break up the deadly pattern. All in all it was an easy puzzle and I enjoyed solving it. Took my a little under 56 minutes to solve.
Edit: Watching Simon solve it made me realize how bad I am at spotting naked singles. The one in box 6 would have made my life a lot easier since that box is where I got stuck at for the longest time compared to the rest of the puzzle.
And Mark may be faster than Simon, but he can’t compete with how much Simon has fun singing the song. He loves it too, but without the same innate love for music and poetry.
51:26 for me, really enjoyed the deductions the puzzle forced early on
My favourite part of CTC is where Simon says "Im stuck, I must have made a mistake." And I keep screaming at the monitor.
Finished in 25:50. That was a very interesting ruleset, I enjoyed that a lot! Only made one significant error along the way (which the fog caught for me so I was able to backtrack and correct my logic).
Delightful puzzle. Everything I want from a FoW.
Done in 30:21, I'm fairly proud of that. Great puzzle!
I love the new animation for three in the corner at least for me.
I can't be the only one waiting daily for the 2h 40m drop? The suspense 😂
Let's Get Cracking: 09:12
Simon's time: 35m25s
Puzzle Solved: 44:37
What about this video's Top Tier Simarkisms?!
The Secret: 4x (14:21, 14:21, 14:31, 14:36)
Maverick: 3x (08:13, 08:16, 08:16)
Three In the Corner: 2x (25:58, 29:23)
And how about this video's Simarkisms?!
Brilliant: 11x (05:32, 10:30, 35:23, 35:27, 41:03, 41:54, 44:05, 44:08, 44:40, 44:46, 45:09)
Ah: 11x (12:45, 14:11, 18:20, 20:06, 22:01, 23:23, 25:15, 35:23, 35:37, 35:51, 38:24)
Beautiful: 10x (09:59, 10:02, 10:56, 11:00, 11:48, 18:20, 22:05, 22:07, 24:33, 35:14)
Sorry: 7x (04:15, 12:36, 14:00, 23:07, 23:23, 26:52, 42:28)
Hang On: 7x (07:37, 15:55, 26:11, 30:08, 39:10, 40:01, 42:21)
In Fact: 7x (09:29, 20:59, 29:08, 32:01, 40:03, 42:14, 43:45)
Gorgeous: 4x (10:25, 11:03, 11:51, 28:49)
By Sudoku: 4x (22:53, 23:36, 34:13, 35:55)
Obviously: 4x (06:54, 11:23, 15:16, 37:32)
What Does This Mean?: 4x (07:38, 09:51, 10:42, 32:54)
Cake!: 3x (04:40, 05:34, 06:16)
Lovely: 2x (43:34, 43:37)
Elegant: 2x (11:51, 45:03)
Stunning: 2x (44:51, 44:53)
Wow: 2x (36:38, 38:27)
Nature: 2x (26:56, 31:48)
Goodness: 1x (33:12)
Naked Single: 1x (33:22)
The Answer is: 1x (23:31)
Clever: 1x (38:54)
In the Spotlight: 1x (29:25)
Incredible: 1x (00:31)
Take a Bow: 1x (45:06)
Disconcerting: 1x (25:45)
Shouting: 1x (05:18)
Surely: 1x (12:54)
That's Huge: 1x (42:25)
Pencil Mark/mark: 1x (29:49)
Most popular number(>9), digit and colour this video:
Ten (4 mentions)
Three (73 mentions)
Black (11 mentions)
Antithesis Battles:
Low (2) - High (1)
Odd (7) - Even (5)
Highest (2) - Lowest (1)
Black (11) - White (3)
Row (4) - Column (2)
FAQ:
Q1: You missed something!
A1: That could very well be the case! Human speech can be hard to understand for computers like me! Point out the ones that I missed and maybe I'll learn!
Q2: Can you do this for another channel?
A2: I've been thinking about that and wrote some code to make that possible. Let me know which channel you think would be a good fit!
I count an extra one, whenever simon says "it's broken" or "I've broken it" in a video
Horray, I get a fogged zipperline for my birthday!
Really looking forward to Chants of Sennaar with you both
54:01 for me. Got stuck on the middle box at the beginning but it all flowed once I was able to break in
Great puzzle. Solvable by 'reasonable' logic rather than things like set theory. It did mean I stayed engaged and completed it. Very clever!
Sometimes I think the option of switching to condensed rulesets would be helpful. For instance, this could be summed up as
-Normal
-Fog of war
-Zipper lines
--All 5 cells long
--Orthogonal only
--Can't share cells
-Kropki dots
For non-beginners, that's way easier to read and reference.
14:39 “don’t let on to anyone you don’t like” 😂
45:03 - took me a while to sort box 5 out but it flowed well after that.
Can someone please explain me the logic around 29:00 in video? Why there is a confidence to use 34 pair and make it 7, but not 35, which makes it 8? both 35 and 17 are available for this line and I can't spot the exact reasoning why it was excluded for the sake of sum of 7. Thanks!
It's because of Row 9. Once the 3 is locked on the zipper, you get a three in the bottom-left of the grid which makes the bottom-right an 8. Then the 8 is no longer available for the centre of the zipper line and it becomes 7=3+4.
Simon states that we know the cells of the first zipper line from the start as the line continues into into r4c4 and r6c6 but there is nothing in the rules that states we know this? The zipper line is 5 cells *long* which means it's reasonable that a terminal cell on the line as the line run the full length along it without continuing?
35:44 for me - a couple of times I had to back up because I paired up the digits on the lines wrong.
I took a break from fixing my car to solve this in 37:21.
Now the suns down and the garage is freezing but worth it!!
I ended up giving up kinda early based off the nature of fog. In the central box, I did get the 1 and had the correct conclusions on the geometery of the first two lines, I somehow thought the line with the doubled digit would be larger and tried to put the 9 there and the 7 as the center of the other line. When the fog didn't clear, I realized it was wrong, and it just felt like it would be cheating to keep trying digits in the fog.
35:07. I got stuck in box 2 for a while until I realized that no matter which way the line went, r2c6 was always a 5
Great fun. Thank you.
What a lovely puzzle. 47 minutes for me, the hardest bit was getting an initial breakin past the initial 1
57:29 for me!! That was very lovely
I usually just watch the solves on the channel instead of doing the puzzles myself, but decided to give this one a go. Took me about an hour, because I got seriously stuck in box 9, trying to figure out the new line and not realizing I could place 9 in the box. Really liked it though.
at the 50 minute mark, giving up and going "I'll just have to watch this video, I'm too stuck" and then I see this comment with the EXACT clue I needed to continue
I burst out laughing at the 3 in the corner realisation and straight missing the 1 2 pair was solved 😂 so funny!
14:02 for me. Great puzzle!!
25:57 Interesting start. I was thinking mod 5 when it ended up being mod 9.
I did way less maths to figure out the middle box. After you know the digit outside the box is 6 or 3 you can deduce that those can't be on the black dot. Then you can see that the bottom of the black dot can't add up to 9 with the digit outside the box. Then you can keep going the way you did.
30:09 for me. Got stuck for a while in the corners 3 & 9
I'm glad I tried this constraint with a FOW first because I kept trying to add digits on the same side of the line. I made SO many mistakes 🤣
If Mark's expertise is in linguistics, then maybe the title for the Sannaar game should be something like, "Professional Wordsmiths Play Chants of Sannaar" for that sweet clickbait.
That started it (the digit outside box9 not being a 1).
[I forget the time-mark]
But when you asked "Where is the 9 in box5,'' that immediately made me wonder wherever the 8 was.
The "8" also only had two spots (either going with that ''1" or a 1 outside the box for a "9" in the center of a zipper line )
Being that outside cell is a "3,6," that means the "8" has to go with that "1" for "9" at its vertex/center.
Perfect
Hope Simon asks about the "8" soon.
I did.
Thanks, Simon.
[@16:54 and before]
ASK WHERE THE 8 GOES IN BOX5
if it's in the lefthand circle , it's going to displace the 9 (which would need an 8 for the "1") so it's not there.
There are two places now (on a line needing a 1)
That "36" outside box5, now means the 8 is with that "1" for a 9 at its vertex/center.
Enough with the math(s), unless it'll lead you to the 7 @18:00 or so).
Thanks again, Simon.
Ask that question, though.
It's much simpler
Simon got it a different way (figures lol).
It was neater asking where the 9s then 8s could go.
Good job I guess though, Simon.
22:15 for me. I love math puzzles!
21:24 we did the math, since you choose 7 we know it's a 3. If you had chosen 8 it would have been a 6. We did the whole 48/51 thing.
I got stuck and had to look at around 33:18 in the video to get back on track (I didn't notice there had to be a 5 on the white Kropki dot), but I was otherwise able to complete the puzzle in 45:12 on my own.
this was a really fun one!~
A real pleasure to solve!
My nightmare! Stuck in the fog and required to do math to escape!
🎉🎉🎉
This was great!
25:08 for me. Beautiful fog of war puzzle!
this one was really nice and fun one
❤foggy puzzles!!
42:41, super satisfying
Getting from box 6 to box 3 and then from 3 to 2 slowed me down a bit, but then it was all easy x-wings in 1,4,7.
Could someone please inform how he acquired that the cell must be 4/6 34:16
Because it sees all the other digits: 159 in the column, 2378 in the row.
Thank you very much. @@MrGrog90
Simon, you missed an opportunity for a song at 32:00. You got something against 90's Hip Hop?
32+ minutes because I constantly tried to add the two cells next to one another instead of the ones opposite the center. Not my ruleset.
I made the same "mistake" with the 12 pair in box 9. It took me far too long and i felt really stupid afterwards. Well i guess nothing better than Sudoku to humble oneself
74:45. Really struggled. And I love maths...
58:41 for me
nice puzzle and solving
26:18 A very Simon moment of missing the obvious. However, I did too.
40 mins for me. Thanks. Also did I miss a setting. 3 in the corner gives me beep boop text (i think) rather than confetti. Is there a setting for this?
I was wondering the same thing. After solving the puzzle, I wanted to see Simon's reaction to the deet deet doot and now I'm feeling ripped off.
Wonderful foggy.
There was a lot to think about it, but it went quite smoothly. Took me 83 minutes to solve.
38:45 my time, fun math sudoku!
25:36 for me 😊
Okay…now I’m imagining a zipper line spider branch.