Logic Masters Deutschland e.V.

Powers of Two

(Eingestellt am 9. September 2025, 08:00 Uhr von Kaktuslav)

Link to SudokuPad: https://sudokupad.app/pvqdcm5cnt



Rules: Normal sudoku rules apply. Logarithmic arrows: Bulbs contain pairwise different (i.e. non-repeating) powers of two (1-, 2-, or 3-digit numbers written in decimal). If a bulb contains 2^x (2 to the power x), the digit on the attached arrow must be x.

Lösungscode: Row 4

Zuletzt geändert am 9. September 2025, 18:17 Uhr

Gelöst von efnenu, plinke, Simon Yuan, Nocek15, Felis_Timon, marcmees, Kitty Trouble, 5381, tgstar, xiaoji, geftus, jalebc, Vaccinia, Arlo Lipof, Adaki, NEWS, CitrusGremlin, peep50183, Grumpy, Chris4927, ... abysszealot, ParaNox, Raistlen, alxnewman, Ton, phoegon, MaciekZ, kangaroo, wormbrain, koXx, Leek169, Crulamin, radium, sciartica, hundertzwoelf, MysticMan, turnz, kasperd, dalyons, Lor, patolucatis
Komplette Liste

Kommentare

am 28. Januar 2026, 00:42 Uhr von MysticMan
Lovely puzzle!

am 10. September 2025, 03:55 Uhr von dzamie
Math :)

am 9. September 2025, 18:35 Uhr von Franjo
From a setter’s perspective you did very well in finding a way to put those nine L.A.‘s into the grid that leads to a unique solution. From a solver’s view it was extremely easy to fill all the bulbs and arrows and get an easy-to-solve standard sudoku. Anyway, thank you for sharing this interesting - experiment(?).

am 9. September 2025, 18:30 Uhr von Supertaster
Each bulb, read as a single number left-to-right, is a power of two. The power is pointed to by the arrow.

For example, 2^7 = 128, so you might have a bulb that reads 128 and points to a 7.

am 9. September 2025, 18:26 Uhr von sfield
"pairwise different" would make sense to distinguish between {2,4} and {4,2}. But one of those is a valid {x,2^x} pair and the other isn't. So including the term pairwise just makes it confusing. I tried solving it for a while before realizing each power had to be different and then it became easy.

am 9. September 2025, 18:17 Uhr von Kaktuslav
Clarified rules

am 9. September 2025, 18:09 Uhr von Dermerlin
Is it really each bulb's SUM that is a power of 2???
I'd guess it's the number writeen in the bulb and not the sum.

am 9. September 2025, 15:42 Uhr von Grumpy
Yeah, the rules are a bit hard to grasp at first.

But essentially:
- Each bulb has a different sum
- Each bulb's sum is a power of 2
- The number on the arrow is the exponent to raise 2 to, to get the sum in the bulb. For example: 4<-(16), since 2^4 = 16

am 9. September 2025, 13:57 Uhr von Lego7656
pairwise? what pairs?

Schwierigkeit:1
Bewertung:89 %
Gelöst:115 mal
Beobachtet:2 mal
ID:000P15

Lösung abgeben

Lösungscode:

Anmelden