Featured Puzzle: Domino Hunt #4
Find all 28 dominoes in a double-six set (0-0 through 6-6) in the grid. Mark each pairing off as individual dominoes. All pair possibilities are used, and no domino is used more than once.
Find all 28 dominoes in a double-six set (0-0 through 6-6) in the grid. Mark each pairing off as individual dominoes. All pair possibilities are used, and no domino is used more than once.
Bats fly, and zombies belong underground – everyone knows that. But can you use this knowledge to place one of each in all the regions?
Oh no! There’s a terrible blizzard, and only one reindeer can guide the way! You must place reindeer and snow in each region of the grid to guide Santa. As we all know, reindeer fly, and snow falls, which is key to solving this puzzle.
Scientists have been going round and round for decades about whether eggs or good for you, or if you should eat them in moderation. All I know is that I’m a sucker for a plate of deviled eggs, or a whole lot of over-easy fried eggs. Today is National Egg Day, in case you missed Egg Month in May. Of course, there’s always World Egg Day on October 11th, so you have another chance to enjoy this delicious staple.
Today, a group of mediums hold a seance to contact the other side. Each peers into their crystal ball, which reveals the first presence they see. Can you deduce everyone who appears from the great beyond?
A is for apple, B is for bee, C is for cat… Today’s puzzle is Easy as ABC. Find the three letters in each row and column, leaving the other three cells empty. Use the hints around the border, which tell you what you see first.
Did you know that you’re not limited to just A, B and C in an Easy as ABC puzzle? Today, we’re going to look for the letters A through D. Find the four letters in each row and column, leaving the other three cells empty. Use the hints around the border, which tell you what you see first.
It’s nearly time for trick-or-treating! To get you in the mood, today is an Einstein-style logic puzzle. This block has four houses. Four children, each in different costumes, visit different ones. Of course, they are each giving away different treats. Can you deduce what costume each child wore, which house they visited, and what they received?
Brush off your times tables, because I have one more back-to-school themed puzzle for you. In Factorism, your goal is to place the numbers 1 through 9 along the top and left of the grid. Numbers in the grid are the product of the factors for that row and column.
Fillomino is another popular Japanese puzzle. Divide the grid into polyomino regions that each contain a single number, ranging from 1-9.