Logic Masters Deutschland e.V.

Wich is wich? I am confused :-]

(Published on 22. March 2024, 12:00 by kierownik)

  1. Normal 9x9 sudoku rules apply: In every row, column and in every 3x3 box the digits from 1 to 9 have to appear atleast once with no repeats.
  2. XV-Pairs: Cells joined by an X or V must sum to 10(X) or 5(V).
    ALL V'S GIVEN. Not all X's given.
  3. Killer cages: Digits in cages must sum to the number in the top-left corner and cannot repeat.
  4. Row indexers(BLUE): A marked cell in row X indicates the row where X appears in the column.
  5. Column indexers(RED): A marked cell in column X indicates the column where X appears in the row.
  6. Fog Of War: The grid is covered with fog. Place correct digits into the cells to get more light, it's OK to put a digit into a cell that is covered by fog.
Sven's Sudokupad

Have fun in playing the puzzle and leave a kind message :-]
Streamers may use all my puzzles.

Solution code: Row 3 and 7. Left to right.

Last changed on -

Solved by seeppp, Stargazing Albatross, wilsig, EmX68, zhangjinyang, forsen, kublai, jalebc, sujoyku, Woody03130, Christovaneeden, rictech, kporadzinski, kkli, Elliott810, lutzreimer, pepu273, zrbakhtiar, ... flaemmchen, Crul, CcmarvMD, shika, dholden, iyork, duckling, konfetti, spientia, x3y2z1, ark29, asii, PippoForte, edwinap, Vegan_warior, KingIsulgard, bilms, edd, illegel, DylanRay, Nexys6969
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Comments

on 23. March 2024, 18:36 by br3akingp01nt
This was a really fun puzzle, I loved the ending and how it utalized the negative constraint

on 23. March 2024, 01:58 by Nostor
Thank you very much for a nice puzzle. Not easy for me, as I'm not very familiar with indexing, and it took me a bit to get my head around it. I'm glad to see now from the comments that I was not the only one who forgot the negative constraint over the struggle with the indexing ...

on 22. March 2024, 17:28 by trashghost
Row/column indexer examples:
so say R5C3 (a blue row indexer) was a 2. that would indicate a 5 in R2C3. in other words, since there’s a 2 in row 5, that puts a 5 in row 2. the column stays the same.
now say R4C9 (a red column indexer) was a 2. that would put a 9 in R4C2. now there’s a 2 in column 9 and a 9 in column 2. the row stays the same.

on 22. March 2024, 16:35 by misha
At first I thought there were 2 valid solutions, then I saw that there was a negative constraint on the V's hidden in the rules. Now I'm wondering if the solve would have been easier if I had noticed it in the first place or if it was only to disambiguate the solution at the very end. Otherwise, fun puzzle.

on 22. March 2024, 16:33 by GorgeousNicko
Very nice puzzle. Not quite a grumble, but I wonder how well fog-of-war actually works when what the fog covers turns out to be so easily predictable!

on 22. March 2024, 16:31 by Morolian
oh im really confused by those indexers..maybe i should practise my english more:)

on 22. March 2024, 15:29 by Ju Corb
Lovely puzzle
Look forward to similar puzzles in the future

Last changed on 22. March 2024, 14:24

on 22. March 2024, 14:21 by kporadzinski
Very nice puzzle. Don't forget that all V's are given :)

on 22. March 2024, 14:10 by rictech
Very nice and smooth! Fairly straightforward if you have experience with indexers (don’t forget the negative V constraint!), and a good intro to them if not. Enjoyed it, thanks!

on 22. March 2024, 13:31 by sujoyku
Thank you for this fun puzzle, kierownik! It was entertaining, although I have to admit the puzzle very much messed with my brain. So the title suits it really well. By the time, I had a good understanding of the indexing, I of course forgot about the negative constraint. :)

on 22. March 2024, 13:26 by Natka23
Can you give some examples for the row and column indexers? :)

Difficulty:2
Rating:88 %
Solved:142 times
Observed:15 times
ID:000GKT

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