Logic Masters Deutschland e.V.

Not Quite 5 puzzle (simple idea)

(Published on 21. May 2020, 18:00 by Carrick22)

Not Quite 5 puzzle

Apply classic latin square rules : Each row and column must contain the digits 1-6 once.

In this puzzle, three different types of clues appears and work as follows :

  • A red cell must contain a number that is not quite 5 (i.e. 4 or 6).
  • The digits on the left are to be placed not quite where the 5 should be (i.e. next to the 5 in that row).
  • The numbers on the top refer to the sum of the digits not quite where the 5 should be (i.e. the sum of all orthogonally adjacent squares from the 5 placed in that column).
In addition, 2s act as stars, so they do not touch diagonally.

This is an idea I came up for a sudoku, however the process of making it seems quite hard. This puzzle is for sharing the idea to everyone.

You can use Penpa-edit for solving it on your browser.

Solution code: Row 2, then row 3.

Last changed on -

Solved by glum_hippo, skywalker, Amedoru, saskia-daniela, Puzzle_Maestro, Nothere, moss, marcmees, zorant, cdwg2000, jessica6, lutzreimer, ropeko, dm_litv, Rollie, Rollo, Quetzal, Zzzyxas, rimodech, zhergan, ... puzzler05, Joo M.Y, pirx, pokerke, pin7guin, Mody, ffricke, Voyager, Matt, RobertBe, Uhu, Semax, Mathi, Thomster, Raistlen, uvo, CJK, Mark Sweep, Zenryo, Jordan Timm, Kekes, Javier Rebottaro, drf93
Full list

Comments

on 24. November 2020, 20:24 by Semax
Quite not bad. :)

on 2. June 2020, 09:32 by CHalb
Funny combination of rules. I especially like the concept of the numbers of the top.

Last changed on 23. May 2020, 15:11

on 23. May 2020, 14:15 by sf2l
sorry I do not understand the 3rd rule can anybody give an example

- If you have a 16 clue, you can fulfill it with 3/6 over and under the 5, and a 3/4 to its left and right (3+6+3+4 = 16). Digits can be repeated in the sum if they do not see each other.

on 22. May 2020, 05:34 by cdwg2000
The red constraint does not seem to be needed.

on 21. May 2020, 18:27 by glum_hippo
Seems like an interesting set of 'hybrid' constraints. Nothing I haven't seen before, but the combination does look intriguing.

Difficulty:1
Rating:78 %
Solved:64 times
Observed:4 times
ID:0003I8

Puzzle variant Filling puzzle Arithmetic puzzle

Enter solution

Solution code:

Login