Logic Masters Deutschland e.V.

Kings and/or Knights

(Published on 5. August 2022, 03:08 by Scruffamudda)

Normal sudoku rules apply.

In this puzzle every digit conforms to an anti-king and/or anti-knight constraint.
Identical digits share the same constraint/s and consecutive digits (eg 1 and 2) must share at least one constraint.

Digits separated by a black dot are in a ratio of 1:2.
All possible dots showing a 1:2 ratio are given.

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Solution code: row 9


Solved by derKrampus, bansalsaab, Azumagao, Dentones, Isa, Tilberg, Bjd, apendleton, Jagga, Myxo, jguer, ohammersmith, avahales, tinounou, jwsinclair, AvonD, akial, Pibonacci, laregioncentrale, ViKingPrime, ... DVFrank, cegie, PippoForte, schlathubali, lovely, chain.reader, soroush, amelia0, Cocoanut, Racteal, Bankey, timyoth, Mikemerin, Abbott Abbott, h5663454, jadezki, ClarityC, annnz, SKORP17
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Comments

on 28. April 2023, 15:21 by Bankey
Very involved logic and needs high focus throughout. Fun to solve. Thanks, @ Scruffamudda :)

on 7. August 2022, 11:59 by DVFrank
Very nice! :^) And thanks @derKrampus for the clarification

on 6. August 2022, 23:21 by Christounet
Very nice ! That was a refreshing ruleset in the domain of the anti-knight anti-king puzzles which usually lead to the same type of scanning in the late solve. Thanks.

on 6. August 2022, 21:15 by zhall12570
Beautiful!

on 6. August 2022, 02:36 by derKrampus
That is not what it means, @DVFrank. A digit satisfies *at least* 1 constraint, but it can satisfy both of them as well. so for example if 1 satisfies constraint A, then 2 can either satisfy only A or both A and B. And if 1 satisfies both A and B, then 2 can satisfy either only A or only B or both A and B.

on 6. August 2022, 00:33 by ViKingPrime
A thoroughly enjoyable puzzle, not too stressful for the beginner but also not too easy. That's a tough balancing act and this puzzle pulls it off beautifully.

on 6. August 2022, 00:06 by DVFrank
What does "consecutive digits must share at least one constraint" mean? As I am reading this, that would immediately imply that there is only one global constraint - but why then phrase it this way?

on 5. August 2022, 14:19 by bansalsaab
Very nice and challenging ruleset. Thanks @Scruffamudda

on 5. August 2022, 12:32 by Tilberg
Nice one! The coloring process was fun and surprising, the disambiguation part was mindbending.

Difficulty:4
Rating:92 %
Solved:46 times
Observed:8 times
ID:000APL

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Solution code:

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