After S-cells, negators, doublers and mirrored digits I waned to combine vampires with zipper lines. See the example puzzle below for an example puzzle with vampire cells and zipper lines. Thanks to the CtC-discord for testing.
In this example, vampires are highlighted in red and prey are highlighted in blue. Each digit appears exactly once in a red cell and exactly once in a blue cell. The short zipper line contains no modifiers and can be read as 3=1+2. The long line has a vampire with value 5 (1+4) in its center. The first two equidistant pairs (23, 14) each sum to 5. At the end of the long line, there is a prey cell (value 0) opposite a vampire cell (value 2+3) so the values also add to 5.
Solution code: column 8, top to bottom
on 25. March 2024, 04:38 by gdc
Thanks @Deino42! I totally understand how the overlapping lines can be quite taxing to scan and reason about. My thinking here was that the local nature of the fog balances these things out and the modifiers quickly become relevant that way.
on 16. March 2024, 14:22 by blackjackfitz
Great puzzle! Several beautiful bits that caught me completely off guard.
on 14. March 2024, 14:25 by Franjo
Solving this puzzle was a great pleasure for me, though It was quite hard for me to follow the path finding the right deductions. But everything was totally logical. Thank you so much for sharing.
on 14. March 2024, 01:52 by Deino42
This puzzle was an approachable and enjoyable solve despite taking me a bit, and I don’t typically enjoy zipper sudokus. (Specifically ones with overlapping lines) However, it worked well for this puzzle!
on 13. March 2024, 18:13 by vitaminz
This puzzle has lots of excellent surprises. Highly recommend.
Difficulty: | |
Rating: | 93 % |
Solved: | 38 times |
Observed: | 6 times |
ID: | 000H9V |