In August, I participated in a puzzle-setting event called Secret Imposter, where each participant set a puzzle in their own style and was then assigned another participant to impersonate, with both puzzles being solved on stream and the chat voting on which puzzle I set. During the actual event, I both failed to convince the rest of the participants that the puzzle I set was in fact mine and didn't even send in a puzzle as an imposter on time due to extenuating mental health reasons.
Of the two puzzles uploaded together, one of them was set by yours truly, and the other was set by my imposter, aqjhs, who I strongly commend as a setter in his own right and did an excellent job mimicking my style. Try to guess in the hidden comments which one is mine, but please don't give it away if you actually participated in the event.
Normal sudoku rules apply.
Arrows: Digits along an arrow sum to the digit in the attached circle.
Projected Parity Party: Clues outside the grid give the sum of the digits on arrows (including circles) up to and including the first such even or first such odd digit. The sum may consist of a single digit.
A digit in a gray square is even.
Solve On SudokuPadSolution code: Row 6
on 1. October 2025, 12:43 by marcmees
Couldn't say one gene from an other, but this puzzle surely was tougher to crack. Fun. Thanks
on 28. September 2025, 16:35 by Gene The Supreme
Fixed uniqueness issue and added link.
Please note: The German version of this page has changed. It is possible that this page does not contain the latest information.