Featured Puzzle – Hashi #4
Connect all of the numbered islands into a single group, using a series of bridges. No more than two bridges may connect any pair of islands.
Connect all of the numbered islands into a single group, using a series of bridges. No more than two bridges may connect any pair of islands.
Can you solve a jigsaw sudoku puzzle with invisible walls? The sudoku part might be easy enough – fill in the grid with numbers and don’t repeat them in any row or column. However, you also can’t repeat them in an irregular region that you can’t see!
It’s the spooky season, and what’s more spooky than a darkened hallway? Place jack o’lanterns to light up every cell in the grid. Use the mirrors to your advantage.
Spring is coming, a time of renewal. So why not introduce a new puzzle? Today, we have Tetroid, a grid division puzzle. It’s a little like L.I.T.S., except that there are no predefined regions, and you’re using all 5 tetromino shapes.
Place light bulbs in the grid in such a way to illuminate all of the unlit cells in the grid, using number clues and walls. Numbers on the walls indicate how many bulbs are placed orthogonally adjacent to them. Walls also block light.
One of the most iconic romantic moments in fiction is the balcony scene in Romeo and Juliet. When I saw the layout of this 2-grid Sudoku puzzle, I knew I had to use that as the background image. There are more ways to overlap a pair of Sudoku grids, but this one just feels right. Enjoy the solve!
Place light bulbs in the grid in such a way to illuminate all of the unlit cells in the grid, using number clues and walls. Numbers on the walls indicate how many bulbs are placed orthogonally adjacent to them. Walls also block light.
Place candles in the grid in such a way to illuminate all of the unlit cells in the grid, using number clues and walls. Numbers on the walls indicate how many candles are placed orthogonally adjacent to them. Walls also block light.
Place light bulbs in the grid in such a way to illuminate all of the unlit cells in the grid, using number clues and walls. Numbers on the walls indicate how many bulbs are placed orthogonally adjacent to them. Walls also block light.
On this beautiful winter’s day, let’s celebrate with a dance in the snow! Today, this arrangement of snowmen will represent your dancing partners.
Draw a single loop which passes through every cell of the grid, turning every time you pass a snowman, and once between each pair.