LITS was invented by Inaba Naoki, and was first published in the Japanese magazine Nikoli in 2004. The name comes from four of the tetromino shapes. The O (square) tetromino is not included, because the rules forbid shading any 2×2 areas.
The key to a LITS puzzle involves small areas that limit possible piece types. Later in these tips, we’ll examine how we create those restricted areas while solving. To start, though, first look at the smallest regions in the grid, usually composed of 4-6 cells. Imagine each tetromino shape and how it might fit. Some regions might only hold one type of piece, while others can contain several. What you’re looking for are cells that must be filled, regardless of the possible pieces. Shade all cells where piece options overlap.
Eliminate Corners
As you shade cells, you will frequently discover three-cell corners. Here, you can create further restrictions by marking out the fourth, because the rules forbid any 2×2 areas. Of course, every L, S, or T tetromino forms one or more of these corners, so if you place one, you can always eliminate cells.
Avoid Isolation
Remember that all shaded cells must form a single orthogonally-connected area in the solution. So watch the areas of the grid where marked-out cells leave shaded pieces with only one path out. If that option is a single cell, it must be part of the adjacent tetromino. Sometimes, this path may require you to choose between more than one cell. In that case, examine other nearby cells along with it. What shapes can you eliminate? Does using that cell force an identical shape, or create a 2×2 covered area? Even if you can’t deduce which cell works immediately, you might discover overlapping cells you can shade in the region, or other cells you can eliminate if that region is large.
Shrink Large Regions
Large regions seem intimidating at first, because they often look like they can potentially hold any type of piece. What you want to do here is chip away at all that space by working on smaller regions surrounding it, Using the 2×2 and identical shape restrictions, you can make the space smaller and smaller until it’s easier to solve. Watch out for:
Identical Shapes: If a portion of the unsolved region is adjacent to a known piece, think about those adjacent cells. Can another type of piece fit there? If some cells can only be shaded by being part of an identical tetromino to the adjacent one, you can eliminate them from the region.
2×2 Areas: Okay, what if non-identical shapes fit those adjacent cells? Does using them create a 2×2 area no matter what piece you try? If so, eliminate them.
Isolated cluster: This one’s a little sneakier. Let’s say we just eliminated a cell in our unknown region. Maybe we had a corner in an adjacent region, or perhaps we eliminated all possible pieces that would use it. Does marking it out isolate some cells so they can no longer fit a piece? If so, we can mark them out, as well.
Solving the Puzzle
I know I bounced around through several different puzzles in the technique examples. If you’d like, you can use them to practice! Here are all the examples used:
My favorite type of Halloween candy is the definitely the chocolate. Today’s puzzle is a Word Sleuth. It’s similar to a Find-a-Word puzzle, but to make it challenging, I’m not giving you the list. Oh, and the words aren’t in a straight line.
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.
When Tetris was in its heyday on computers, I was in high school. I’m not sure how many games I’ve played, but I definitely got to the point where I started seeing tetrominoes everywhere. Maybe the inventor of Tetoron, Nishiyama Yukari, was also a fan. In this puzzle, you must divide the grid into tetromino shapes.
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!
At one point in history, the Ides of a month was simply the middle of it, associated with the first full moon, due to the origins relating to the lunar cycle. But that forever changed in 44 B.C.E., when Roman senators assassinated Julius Caesar. But, can you change history and help Caesar escape to his waiting chariot?
The palace is divided into rooms. Some are impassable because the traitors have set them ablaze! Shade the impassable rooms to reveal the escape route.
t’s been months since we’ve done a Gokigen puzzle. Let’s take a break from all the schoolwork puzzles to relax and draw some diagonal lines. Place slanted lines in every cell of the grid, using the clues to help you figure out the direction of each one.