Working Nine To Five
(Published on 8. January 2024, 20:03 by fjam)
This puzzle introduces a novel twist on Japanese Sums, by combining them with X-Sums. The title comes from the requirement to divide the grid into regions that each have either nine or five cells.
- Chaos Deconstruction:
Locate nine regions of nine orthogonally connected cells in the grid and fill each cell with a digit from 1-9 such that no digit repeats in a row, column or region.
- Pentominoes:
Cells outside of the regions must form pentominoes (orthogonally connected blocks of five cells). Shade these cells and fill every cell of each pentomino with the letter associated with its shape. Every pentomino must contain a different letter. Pentominoes may not touch each other orthogonally or diagonally.
- Japanese X-Sums:
Clues outside the grid give a list of X-sums clues in order. The first cell of each group of unshaded cells in each row/column from the direction of the clues begins a new X-sum, summing the digits in the first X cells from that cell, including itself, where X is the value in that cell. Shaded cells are included in the count of cells, but are treated as zero value. If the count of cells would carry a clue beyond the grid boundaries, the clue is invalid and is labelled X.
- Liar Cipher:
In each row/column, two sets of clues are given on the left/top and right/bottom of the grid. In each case, one set is true and the other is false. In these clues, each digit from 0-9 is encoded by a different letter from A-J. A ‘?’ may be replaced by any digit, but the first digit of a clue must not be 0. A ‘...’ represents any number of additional valid or invalid clues, possibly none. Invalid X-sums clues, labelled with X, are not encoded by the cipher.
A 6x6 example puzzle is provided below to explain the correct way to interpret Japanese X-Sums. In the example there are four regions of five cells each, tetrominoes are used for shaded regions and the liar cipher rule is discarded.
Solve Example on SudokuPad
Solve Example on Penpa
In both the example and main puzzle, all digits and letters must be filled in to trigger answer check (including the cipher in the main puzzle). This requires Letter Tool on SudokuPad, while Penpa can use Sudoku mode with Caps Lock turned on, or Number mode. In Penpa all edges of regions and pentominoes must also be drawn and the pentominoes must be shaded grey or black.
Small tetromino/pentomino grids are provided in the bottom right corner of each puzzle as a reminder of possible shapes and their associated letters. A larger image of possible pentomino shapes for the main puzzle is provided below.
Solve on SudokuPad
Solve on Penpa
This puzzle was constructed for
Gliperal in the 2023 Secret Satan puzzle exchange. Having previously constructed for Gliperal in the CTC Discord 2021 Secret Santa, I wanted to create a complex puzzle combining elements of multiple genres that I wasn't experienced enough to construct when I made
Grotto Spelunking and
The Toppling Tree.
After experimenting with an idea for a deconstruction puzzle with 3x3 regions that divided the remaining cells into unique pentominoes, I was forced to conclude that this was probably impossible. That led to chaos deconstruction, which could work quite easily, while the Japanese X-Sums idea came from a suggestion of twists on variants such as bending X-sums. After playing around with the rule for a while I came up with some interesting logic, which worked well when combined with the liar cipher element to allow solvers to discover what is and isn't possible with this ruleset while solving the puzzle.
Solve video links in hidden comments: Gliperal
Solution code: Row 10, Row 11 (digits and letters)
Last changed on on 31. May 2024, 16:11
Solved by Gliperal, zzw, Playmaker6174, ONeill, Bellsita, Jesper, TitaniaLowe, Vebby, Agent, Myxo, MicroStudy, isajo4002, pkp, Silverstep, Statistica, quantumquark1
Comments
on 24. January 2024, 00:15 by Myxo
Amazing puzzle!!!
Last changed on 16. January 2024, 17:56on 16. January 2024, 11:59 by Vebby
Future solvers: Take special note of how the clues to the right and bottom work by examining the example image (the example is NOT a liar puzzle, all clues are valid). I initially misunderstood how they worked by making faulty assumptions about the directionality of x-sums and the ordering of clues.
on 11. January 2024, 06:29 by ONeill
Absolutely awesome! Thanks!
on 8. January 2024, 20:58 by Playmaker6174
Absolute bonkers, how could anyone think of these kinds of idea lmao
But honestly, it's astonishing how some of the parts were done so well and satisfying like that, which eventually contributed to a great triumph at the end x)
on 8. January 2024, 20:11 by zzw
Super weird rules, super difficult, super awesome puzzle. Everything fits together so well here, it's a beautiful construction!
on 8. January 2024, 20:10 by Gliperal
I feel a bit bad about having gotten the same santa for two different events, but this puzzle was even better than the last one! The ruleset is huge but actually fairly intuitive once you get into it, and the accompanying story was just the icing on the cake. Thank you for a wonderful Christmas :D