Logic Masters Deutschland e.V.

Halligen

(Published on 8. January 2023, 07:48 by KNT)

Divide the grid into island cells and water cells. The water is orthogonally connected, and no 2x2 area is entirely water. Every island contains exactly one number that is its size.

Ships are to be placed in some water cells. If a number is in a water cell, it is a lighthouse, which indicates the total number of ships that share a row or column with that lighthouse. Ships may not touch each other, or lighthouses, even diagonally. Lighthouses may only touch other lighthouses diagonally.

SudokuPad

penpa+

Solution code: Row 6, S for ship, L for island cell, and W for water cell.

Last changed on on 24. June 2024, 00:56

Solved by wisty, Dandelo, Jesper, Vebby, Piatato, polar, Xendari, data, Koalagator2, MagnusJosefsson, Niverio, Phistomefel, Gliperal, kjholt, Jaych, Agent, cmb, jkuo7, Alex, Statistica, wooferzfg, Jakhob, AnnaTh, misko, lerroyy, akamchinjir, lupo, pandiani42, Nell Gwyn, Uhu, ManuH, Christounet, Joe Average, Paletron, Nick Smirnov, Boop, ibag
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Comments

on 26. September 2024, 08:52 by ibag
Great - as usual! ;-)

on 1. February 2023, 02:55 by wooferzfg
Great puzzle, thank you. The scanning is definitely tough, but the lighthouse logic was really satisfying to figure out.

on 14. January 2023, 16:01 by cmb
Nice one.

on 14. January 2023, 07:03 by Agent
Very nice! I didn't know about the lighthouse ruleset, thanks for this discovery.

Last changed on 10. January 2023, 02:01

on 10. January 2023, 01:29 by Phistomefel
That was awesome! It wasn't so easy for me, but a very enjoyable solve. Thank you for constructing this beauty, KNT!

Out of curiosity: Are you planning on publishing Halligen variants, as well? :)

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Glad you enjoyed it :)

To answer your question: No, it wasn’t really my intention, as this puzzle was initially going to be a 10x10 example for the “real” one, which I hope is a fitting tribute to the original Halligen puzzles. The follow up is also fairly vanilla, none of that diagonal loop insanity, but it *does* have one complication that this doesn’t have, which should prove to make it more interesting. However, if people do manage to solve it and really enjoy it, I definitely would make more, and could probably come up with some interesting variations. It was particularly fun to set for me!

Also, theres a shame there are so few of these to solve. Maybe some others can provide a few more for me? ;-)

Last changed on 9. January 2023, 17:43

on 9. January 2023, 17:39 by MagnusJosefsson
Very nice original ruleset, I imagine the next one could be quite challenging indeed!

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I'm glad you enjoyed it, Magnus! And yes, the follow up is definitely challenging :). This was initially going to be the example puzzle (10x10), but I decided to extend the width and separate them. Also, this ruleset has been used by tuace 5 times in the past (can see under Lighthouses tag), and the second, or really main puzzle, is a tribute to his series, which is absolutely incredible and I recommend hugely.

on 8. January 2023, 07:51 by wisty
This puzzle is beautiful! Really elegant use of an elegant ruleset. A good variety of deductions make use of different aspects of the puzzle so it feels refreshing and holds your interest even if you're like me and get stuck sometimes!

Difficulty:4
Rating:98 %
Solved:37 times
Observed:3 times
ID:000CJC

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Solution code:

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