Featured Puzzle: Slitherlink #4 – Zombie Fort!
The zombies are invading the forest! Fortunately, you’re VERY fast at building walls. Can you keep all the villagers safe from the zombie horde?
The zombies are invading the forest! Fortunately, you’re VERY fast at building walls. Can you keep all the villagers safe from the zombie horde?
Your town has become the latest target of the zombie horde! Make your getaway through the sewer tunnels! You know the manholes where you will enter and exit, but you need to figure out the correct path to take.
When they’re not in your boot, snakes are often found sunning themselves in some peaceful place. In this grid, you can see the head and the tip of the snake’s tail. Can you safely uncover the rest of its body?
When they’re not in your boot, snakes are often found sunning themselves in some peaceful place. In this grid, you can see the head and the tip of the snake’s tail. Can you safely uncover the rest of its body?
Haunt Hunters are at another job site, testing for poltergeists. This grid shows all the readings of potential specters. See if you can mark which spots are definitely haunted.
Ready for some square dancing? SquarO is a Minesweeper-like puzzle. It reminds me a bit of standardized testing, because you’re shading in little circles. Basically, each number represents how many of the four circles on the corners of each cell should be filled in. Good luck!
It’s Groundhog Day! They’re hiding in the corners of this grid. Using SquarO rules, find the rodent prognosticators who’ll stay out in the sun with us instead of hiding from their shadows.
Cold weather is here, and its time to dig out the quilts and blankets. But you might have an extra houseguest, so it’s time to sew a new one!
Add buttons and stitches so that each region is connected to every neighboring region by one stitch each.
Cold weather is here, and its time to dig out the quilts and blankets. But you might have an extra houseguest, so it’s time to sew a new one!
Add buttons and stitches so that each region is connected to every neighboring region by one stitch each.
Today in 1790, Great Britain issued Patent #1764 to Thomas Saint for the very first sewing machine design. Sadly, he may have patented the idea, but he never actually built and marketed his invention. That happened in 1874, thanks to William Newton Wilson, who discovered the old patent, built it, and proved it worked. To honor the day, let’s sew some Stitches!