Exploring the house numbering constraint, inspired by Jay Dyer's puzzle.
You can play this puzzle online using:
Here's an example image how the 'house numbering' rule works:
Suppose that r6c5 is a shaded cell. Then the first cell of the column (r1c5) must be a 6, the first cell of the row (r6c1) must be a 5, and the first cell of the box (r4c4) must be an 8. The corner pencil marks in box 5 indicate how cells are numbered in boxes. This numbering works that way for every box in the grid.
Hope you'll enjoy.
Solution code: Column 8. I.e. the 9 digits in column 8 from top to bottom, for example: 123456789
on 28. February 2023, 11:54 by Playmaker6174
I expected to have so much trouble scanning this one at first, but it was surprisingly smooth and satisfying all along, really fun! :)
on 29. October 2022, 17:45 by Qodec
Thanks everyone for your kind feedback, much appreciated!
on 29. October 2022, 15:36 by Niverio
My first house numbering puzzle, and I absolutely enjoyed that!
on 28. October 2022, 19:17 by Perladel
I love this new ruleset! Great puzzle!
on 28. October 2022, 12:16 by Snookerfan
Very nice, thank you!
on 28. October 2022, 00:35 by madhupt
A very delightful puzzle. The constraint took some getting used to but after that the iterations just kept on leading towards the solution. Bravo!
on 28. October 2022, 00:17 by Jesper
Fun and approachable, thanks Qodec!
on 27. October 2022, 23:20 by Innocuous
Very enjoyable puzzle with an interesting constraint. Surprisingly approachable
on 27. October 2022, 23:15 by Fool on Hill
Very enjoyable puzzle. Getting used to this constraint - some very neat logic involving the Renbans.