Logic Masters Deutschland e.V.

Wich is wich? I am confused :-]

(Published on 22. March 2024, 12:00 by kierownik)

  1. Normal 9x9 sudoku rules apply: In every row, column and in every 3x3 box the digits from 1 to 9 have to appear atleast once with no repeats.
  2. XV-Pairs: Cells joined by an X or V must sum to 10(X) or 5(V).
    ALL V'S GIVEN. Not all X's given.
  3. Killer cages: Digits in cages must sum to the number in the top-left corner and cannot repeat.
  4. Row indexers(BLUE): A marked cell in row X indicates the row where X appears in the column.
  5. Column indexers(RED): A marked cell in column X indicates the column where X appears in the row.
  6. Fog Of War: The grid is covered with fog. Place correct digits into the cells to get more light, it's OK to put a digit into a cell that is covered by fog.
Sven's Sudokupad

Have fun in playing the puzzle and leave a kind message :-]
Streamers may use all my puzzles.

Solution code: Row 3 and 7. Left to right.

Last changed on -

Solved by seeppp, Stargazing Albatross, wilsig, EmX68, zhangjinyang, forsen, kublai, jalebc, sujoyku, Woody03130, Christovaneeden, rictech, kporadzinski, kkli, Elliott810, lutzreimer, pepu273, zrbakhtiar, ... athenaria, Sliark, jjtheplum, Martini&Toto, flaemmchen, Crul, CcmarvMD, shika, dholden, iyork, duckling, konfetti, spientia, x3y2z1, ark29, asii, PippoForte, edwinap, Vegan_warior, KingIsulgard
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Comments

on 23. March 2024, 18:36 by br3akingp01nt
This was a really fun puzzle, I loved the ending and how it utalized the negative constraint

on 23. March 2024, 01:58 by Nostor
Thank you very much for a nice puzzle. Not easy for me, as I'm not very familiar with indexing, and it took me a bit to get my head around it. I'm glad to see now from the comments that I was not the only one who forgot the negative constraint over the struggle with the indexing ...

on 22. March 2024, 17:28 by trashghost
Row/column indexer examples:
so say R5C3 (a blue row indexer) was a 2. that would indicate a 5 in R2C3. in other words, since there’s a 2 in row 5, that puts a 5 in row 2. the column stays the same.
now say R4C9 (a red column indexer) was a 2. that would put a 9 in R4C2. now there’s a 2 in column 9 and a 9 in column 2. the row stays the same.

on 22. March 2024, 16:35 by misha
At first I thought there were 2 valid solutions, then I saw that there was a negative constraint on the V's hidden in the rules. Now I'm wondering if the solve would have been easier if I had noticed it in the first place or if it was only to disambiguate the solution at the very end. Otherwise, fun puzzle.

on 22. March 2024, 16:33 by GorgeousNicko
Very nice puzzle. Not quite a grumble, but I wonder how well fog-of-war actually works when what the fog covers turns out to be so easily predictable!

on 22. March 2024, 16:31 by Morolian
oh im really confused by those indexers..maybe i should practise my english more:)

on 22. March 2024, 15:29 by Ju Corb
Lovely puzzle
Look forward to similar puzzles in the future

Last changed on 22. March 2024, 14:24

on 22. March 2024, 14:21 by kporadzinski
Very nice puzzle. Don't forget that all V's are given :)

on 22. March 2024, 14:10 by rictech
Very nice and smooth! Fairly straightforward if you have experience with indexers (don’t forget the negative V constraint!), and a good intro to them if not. Enjoyed it, thanks!

on 22. March 2024, 13:31 by sujoyku
Thank you for this fun puzzle, kierownik! It was entertaining, although I have to admit the puzzle very much messed with my brain. So the title suits it really well. By the time, I had a good understanding of the indexing, I of course forgot about the negative constraint. :)

on 22. March 2024, 13:26 by Natka23
Can you give some examples for the row and column indexers? :)

Difficulty:2
Rating:88 %
Solved:137 times
Observed:6 times
ID:000GKT

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