Featured Puzzle: Hiroimono #2
Can you gather all the stones from this grid? Choose any stone to start, and number them in the order you pick them up.
Can you gather all the stones from this grid? Choose any stone to start, and number them in the order you pick them up.
Your ancestors have come to visit for Dia de los Muertos, but it looks like some imposters have followed them. Can you tell which ones are the doppelgängers so you can enjoy your reunion in peace?
Fill the triangles in the grid with the numbers 1-9 so that there are no duplicates in any large triangular region or along any stripe of cells, even those that skip over the middle.
One of the best things about the holiday season is the constant stream of baked goods. Today, we’re serving cookies! Draw horizontal and vertical lines to connect all the cookies into a single group.
Okay, Mom and Dad are out shopping. Now’s your chance to snoop for presents! The problem is that it involves a bit of math. They must have hidden them based on your last report card.
Kakuro is another popular Japanese puzzle. Another popular name is “Cross Sums,” because it functions similarly to a crossword puzzle. Fill in the grid with the digits 1-9.
“I want to play a game.” Jigsaw has scrambled the regions of a Sudoku grid and placed all the answers in cages! Can you still solve it?
The final day of the year is typically a time of reflection. Naturally, that calls for a puzzle about reflecting things! This is Kin-Kon-Kan, a puzzle about placing mirrors. Draw a diagonal line in only one cell within each region.
What a lovely day for a walk in the park! Better yet, it’s time for the annual Snowman-Building contest! Of course, you don’t want to trample all over the designated snowman positions. Can you deduce where the snowman will be built, and then plan a route that circles the rest of the park?
Shade four cells in each region to place exactly one L, I, T, or S-tetromino there. Shaded cells form one orthogonally contiguous area.