Solution code: Row 6
on 6. November 2024, 12:25 by abadx
I like your puzzles but I was not a huge fan of you because (until today) I thought your style was a bit dull. But this puzzle really surprised me on the good side. Very brilliant work and an original design. Congrats
Hello, @abadx I will give you a list of some of my favorites that are more unconventional: Try "The Great Escape", "Super Index", "Animal Farm Rebels", "The Path is Clear", "Fire Photon Torpedoes!", "7 Maids 'a Milking", "6 Geese 'a Laying", "5 Golden Rings", "Deconstructed Treasure Hunt", "Synchronized Swimming?", "Nothing But Net" (Do the embedded challenge in the rules 8-), "Brick House" (Find the Easter Egg, or inside joke, in the puzzle and comment whether or not you understand it). Peace to you. -Will Power
on 9. August 2024, 00:03 by Will Power
The original rules were written in 2021 to be clear to Germans, using advice from German solvers. Clarified the rules in 2024 for everyone else.
on 28. March 2024, 00:12 by Will Power
@PuzzleDoubt @tobymgk @bolgat Thanks so much for completing Galaxy Minesweeper Sudoku. The puzzle is now rated. I hope you liked it. -Will Power
on 25. March 2024, 15:33 by PuzzleDoubt
I still don't quite understand the ruleset. wouldn't the 3 pink cells in boxes 7 & 8 all be 3 since they all see the same 3 cells, including themselves?
@PuzzleDoubt The sole purpose of the pink cells is to find 4 separate paths that are continuous and consecutive. Multiple cells MAY have the same pink count, but only one will lead to the continuous path on that galaxy arm. In your example, find where the 1, 2 and 4 must be to determine which cell gets the 3. Thanks for playing. -Will Power
That helped! Thanks for the clarification!
on 29. March 2023, 08:55 by Montikulum
The ruleset is a bit convoluted but I found the idea very original - deserves more solvers and ratings!
@montikulum Thanks so much for digging into some of my past puzzles. If you are looking for outside the box thinking, you may want to try "The Great Escape", then "The Great Escape II', "County Fair", "Anti Kropki Dot Sudoku", and "Animal Farm". For ones people tended to like, due to familiarity with the ruleset, try any of mine with the word "Stickman" in the title. Have a great day. -Will Power
on 13. November 2021, 23:20 by Will Power
The cages are to show the numbers outside the center box that were given at the start. The original rule set said to ignore these in the beginning of the puzzle, but may have confused some people. In the new rule set, I still wanted to set them apart because it might not be the goal of the galaxy arms to try to include them.
on 13. November 2021, 18:08 by Will Power
Thanks to Dandelo for a clearer rule set and German translation.
on 13. November 2021, 10:51 by Will Power
To henrypijames: See that the 9 in the center of the grid sees all 9 pinks around it, including itself. There is only one cell in the center box that sees exactly 8 pink cells out of 9 possible. That is the 8. One chess king's move away from the 8 in the center box, there is only one cell that sees 7 pink cells. Label that 7. Continue moving 1 king's move and reducing the number by 1. The arm that begins with the 8 is the simplest one.
on 13. November 2021, 10:37 by Will Power
To all: If you ever played Minesweeper on your computer, the numbers that appear when you select a cell tell you how many mines are within a king's move of that cell. In this game, I have shown you all the mines in pink, and I use the same concept to reveal the sudoku numbers on the grid. Think of this as Minesweeper, in reverse.
Please note: The German version of this page has changed. It is possible that this page does not contain the latest information.