This is a standard (but hard!)
Yajisan-Kazusan puzzle. I recently challenged myself to set a standard puzzle of this type, as practice for a mashup ruleset I'm exploring. Unfortunately, I
might have gone a little mad with power, resulting in this grid being produced before I realised the situation's gravity.
This puzzle is undoubtedly larger and tougher than it needs to be, but I thought I'd still post it, either as a curiosity in its own right or for those seeking a very stiff challenge. Getting started is likely to prove difficult, and the puzzle should put up quite a tough fight before it falls.
Familiarity with Yajisan-Kazusan is encouraged; otherwise, this
video from the Unshackling Sudokus and Puzzles channel covers pretty much all the essentials. This will also be the last in my recent string of brutal and stubborn puzzles — any future puzzles I post will be set in a more conventional style. Good luck!
Normal Yajisan-Kazusan rules apply:
- Shade some cells so that no two shaded cells are orthogonally adjacent and the remaining unshaded cells form one orthogonally connected area.
- If a cell with a number in it is unshaded, the number represents how many shaded cells are in a straight line in the indicated direction.
- If a cell with a number in it is shaded, the number is meaningless.
Link for online solving: Penpa+
Zuletzt geändert am 16. Februar 2024, 08:14 Uhr