The "Empty Grid" Sudoku

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  • Опубліковано 24 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,4 тис.

  • @bool.
    @bool. 3 роки тому +8090

    Genuinely stunned that a sudoku with no digits, and only rules which apply to entire boxes, could have a unique solution AND a logical path to reach it. Incredible setting!

    • @cmyk8964
      @cmyk8964 3 роки тому +81

      Actually there’s a 5 in the center of Box 4, since every 3×3 magic square has to have a 5 in the center.

    • @lock_ray
      @lock_ray 3 роки тому +157

      Given that the solution is unique, by the same logic there are 81 given digits

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 3 роки тому +70

      The setter got the idea to try to do it when he was reading the comments on another puzzle. Someone had said one day Simon's going to open up the puzzle and it'll just be an empty grid. Many setters have tried with the constraints that we have to develop a similar puzzle. This one is the first of its kind that has been featured.

    • @Aerxis
      @Aerxis 3 роки тому +15

      If there is a unique solution, there is always a logical path to reach it.

    • @MARK-gp9hb
      @MARK-gp9hb 2 роки тому +17

      if you understand the mathematics then the rules become like hints

  • @StormBurnX
    @StormBurnX 2 роки тому +1555

    26:53 "51, that's not prime, all darts players will know that"
    The casualness and confidence with which he makes these comments simply delight me. It's as if it's such a simple, elegant truth that naturally everyone knows by heart, this man's intelligence is absolutely unfathomable

    • @yellowyoda274
      @yellowyoda274 2 роки тому +73

      Like at 14:00 "if the three was in the corner, we would have 3,6,9 and could do the song"

    • @StormBurnX
      @StormBurnX 2 роки тому +1

      @@yellowyoda274 hahaha very true

    • @NinjaOnANinja
      @NinjaOnANinja 2 роки тому +6

      That's not intelligence. That is education.

    • @StormBurnX
      @StormBurnX 2 роки тому +90

      @@NinjaOnANinja intelligence is understanding the difference between merely being educated, and being able to make sense of all the information after having been educated. Amusing to see you comment this, good try though.

    • @NinjaOnANinja
      @NinjaOnANinja 2 роки тому +2

      @@StormBurnX not really. Robots can be just as logical. Be serious plz.

  • @kana2112
    @kana2112 3 роки тому +3214

    This is by far the best explanation of a magic square I've ever heard.

    • @amoswittenbergsmusings
      @amoswittenbergsmusings 3 роки тому +23

      YES! SET meets magic.

    • @martinepstein9826
      @martinepstein9826 3 роки тому +13

      Same here. You could even keep going with the sum logic. e.g. if 1 was in the corner then we would have to make 14 in two cells three different ways, and using the secret the remaining two cells would have to add to 2.

    • @phs125
      @phs125 3 роки тому +31

      Another thing I would add is,
      Do evens go in corners or the odds?
      If odds went in the corners, then you'd have a odd-even-odd row (or column)
      Odd+even+odd gives a even number, 15 isn't even.
      So odds don't go in corners. Evens do...

    • @m4riel
      @m4riel 3 роки тому +13

      Another nice way that also immediately gives which numbers are in the corners is this:
      •Write all possible partitions of 15 with 3 distinct numbers from 1 to 9
      9+5+1 ; 9+4+2 ; 8+6+1 ; 8+5+2 ; 8+4+3 ; 7+6+2 ; 7+5+3 ; 6+5+4
      •Separate the numbers 1-9 by how many times they each appear:
      {4 times} = 5 || {3 times} = 2,4,6,8 || {2times} = 1,3,7,9
      The middle number has to appear 4 times, the corners' three, and the ones adjacent to the middle two, so you got an idea of how the square looks like just from this.

    • @SjorsHoukes
      @SjorsHoukes 2 роки тому +5

      There’s an even easier way to discern what the middle digit should be - it’s simply the mean number between 1 and 9. :)

  • @pedroriosbustamante6311
    @pedroriosbustamante6311 2 роки тому +67

    As someone who took 2 and a half hours to complete the puzzle, I felt personally offended every time he said "you probably saw this before I did"

    • @fuu2b
      @fuu2b 16 днів тому +2

      @pedroriosbustamante6311 I'm good at making deductions from his observations. Without his insight, I'm liable to never solve it. But with my help, he'd greatly improve his times.

  • @arcaderat1613
    @arcaderat1613 3 роки тому +1393

    This is the last type of channel I ever thought I’d get hooked on but I’ve been binging this for the past two days.

    • @user5214
      @user5214 2 роки тому +6

      Still watching this channel?

    • @theawesomebrit3676
      @theawesomebrit3676 2 роки тому +2

      Same

    • @jestfullgremblim8002
      @jestfullgremblim8002 Рік тому +2

      ​@@user5214is it possible to just stop watching CTC? Hahaha

    • @kieranutne2554
      @kieranutne2554 Рік тому +9

      Just started watching these solves. He's so good at pacing his explanation of his thought process while figuring out the logical solve at the same time. Also he's so invested I get glued to the screen. This content is so satisfying 😅

  • @lokew1254
    @lokew1254 3 роки тому +868

    26:06 Am I the only one that found it weirdly wholesome that he got slightly upset at himself and apologised to the eights for missing them lol

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 3 роки тому +14

      When I saw and heard him do that about the 8's, It made me think about Oliver Twist for some reason.

    • @raydarable
      @raydarable Рік тому +1

      Same.

    • @griffinshorts785
      @griffinshorts785 Рік тому +4

      I don’t know what’s more constricting, the prime rules or the sudoku rules 😂

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo Рік тому +3

      ​@@griffinshorts785 The Prime Box has 288 different combinations. The Square Box has 4 different combinations. The Square Box is more restrictive. Even more restrictive than the Magic Square which has 8 different combinations.

    • @griffinshorts785
      @griffinshorts785 Рік тому +2

      @@Jodawo interesting. It just seemed to me that he used the prime rules a lot more than anything else

  • @longwaytotipperary
    @longwaytotipperary 3 роки тому +3524

    I knew you'd eventually get a blank grid!!!!! The next level set of rules from the setter could be "read my mind!" 😅

  • @GarfieldConnolly
    @GarfieldConnolly 3 роки тому +738

    Never ever apologise for taking a long time to solve a puzzle. Watching you blitz through puzzles would not be as enjoyable. I look forward to watching the channel every evening.

  • @johncox7169
    @johncox7169 3 роки тому +4817

    The fact that he never realized that box 3 and 5 were exactly the same amuses me.

    • @kirstymcdonald361
      @kirstymcdonald361 3 роки тому +154

      That’s exactly what I was thinking!

    • @mikeychrisanthus9948
      @mikeychrisanthus9948 3 роки тому +451

      I did not notice that either somehow

    • @waynemv
      @waynemv 3 роки тому +325

      I used that fact in order to somewhat cheat. Before trying to work out the logic for box 5, I had noticed that the digits of box 3 fit all the sudoku constraints of box 5. So as an experiment I tried just copying box 3 into box 5, not really expecting it to work and thinking I'd have to rewind after it lead to a contradiction. But then the puzzle solved easily from there.

    • @saifanitriramadani
      @saifanitriramadani 3 роки тому +32

      Right when I was thinking about it, I found this comment. What a coincidence.

    • @grantbarkalow4675
      @grantbarkalow4675 3 роки тому +19

      Wow!!!! i didn't notice

  • @victorribera5796
    @victorribera5796 3 роки тому +3264

    I just have to say that normal sudoku rules apply is not one of the specified rules

    • @katieschroeder7620
      @katieschroeder7620 3 роки тому +194

      Maybe the solution was wrong, then! Considering normal sudoku rules don't apply... Lol

    • @richie3366
      @richie3366 3 роки тому +287

      @@katieschroeder7620 Either the puzzle was wrong (by having multiple non-sudoku solutions) or the solution was indeed the one he got (regardless of the sudoku rules Simon applied ; but I doubt very much it was solvable without them)
      What I mean is: as long as the solution Simon found is respecting all the specified rules, he absolutely got the intended one ; except if the puzzle is broken/ambiguous

    • @britlion
      @britlion 3 роки тому +82

      Came here for this. Nowhere does it say it's a sudoku at all!

    • @mangouschase
      @mangouschase 3 роки тому +60

      maybe there was a character limit lmao

    • @anybrody
      @anybrody 3 роки тому +37

      since normal sudoku does not apply, you could put letters in the grid instead of numbers 😜

  • @Stephen-Fox
    @Stephen-Fox 3 роки тому +1289

    "I'm just struck by how little sudoku I did" - To be fair, Sudoku is usually the last thing you try as soon as there's any sort of variant rule that's not a standard variant...

    • @matthewkaseman7457
      @matthewkaseman7457 3 роки тому +44

      He filled in 81 numbers though, so that that seems like doing quite a lot of sudoku!

    • @christopherknight9960
      @christopherknight9960 3 роки тому +17

      @@matthewkaseman7457 I think you completely missed the point.

    • @matthewkaseman7457
      @matthewkaseman7457 3 роки тому +66

      @@christopherknight9960 I mean, I might be approaching his point obliquely, sure, but I'm not completely wrong! The platonic ideal of a sudoku is filling digits into boxes, and this puzzle let the player do that 81 times, which is quite a lot more than getting to do 65 or 70 digits. I'd argue that this puzzle was the maximum amount of sudoku per sudoku possible!

    • @hhaavvvvii
      @hhaavvvvii 3 роки тому +10

      "Doing sodoku" in this context means using the uniqueness constraints on each column, row, and box to affect other rows, columns, or boxes.

    • @Stephen-Fox
      @Stephen-Fox 3 роки тому +5

      @@matthewkaseman7457 (Didn't spot this until just now)
      What isHavvy said - "Doing sudoku" in this context is "sudoku logic" - The things that being a 9x9 Latin Square with 9 additional 3x3 regions tells you. At its simplest, pointing pairs, naked and hidden singles, and the like. At it's more advanced, stuff like X-Wings, Y-Wings, continuous nice loops, skyscrapers, SET stuff, and more obtuse techniques I don't have the foggiest what they are yet alone how to spot them.
      All sudoku variants add additional constraints - additional possible logical paths - to that, but those variants are using additional, non-sudoku, logic that interacts with the logic of sudoku.Taking kropki dots, for example, since one of the GAPPs (a companion series to GAS, which features non-sudoku puzzles, posted daily on the CTC discord) was a 7x7 Kropki - No sudoku, just a 7x7 latin square with kropki dots, and which I believe predates the Kropki sudoku variant, they give a logic that exists outside of Sudoku logic all on their own, and as such when doing a Kropki Sudoku, it's not really 'doing sudoku' when the logic you're using is currently only the logic that you get from Kropki, not from the additional 3x3 boxes from Sudoku (Although, obviously, since both Sudoku and Kropki puzzles are types of Latin Squares, there's a lot of overlap with the logic that's Sudoku logic, and the logic that's Kropki logic)
      What Simon meant when he said 'I didn't do much sudoku' and I was riffing on is that he was almost entirely using the variant ruleset rather than any of the logic that comes from the grid just being a sudoku (Which his mind seems to instinctively do as soon as he has any variant for as long as possible, sometimes doing something a far more complicated way using the variant rules when a simpler method using sudoku would have sufficed)

  • @NettoTakashi
    @NettoTakashi 3 роки тому +182

    You finally did it, you absolute madman. You solved a completely empty grid. Kudos to the setter for managing to find a ruleset that allows a unique solution with absolutely no clues.

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 2 роки тому +10

      Wait till you see Empty Grid 2. It'll only have specific rules for 3 Boxes instead of 8 that this one had. There will be less rules. Also when you finish the puzzle, there's a huge Easter Egg.

  • @zackvolturo8032
    @zackvolturo8032 3 роки тому +95

    Thank you for the magic square proof, I was solving with a few friends yesterday who aren’t as familiar and my proof was basically “5 is always in the middle and evens in the corner because that’s what the sudoku gods say.”

  • @GourmetBurrito
    @GourmetBurrito 3 роки тому +326

    A year ago, Simon probably would've thought Mark was trolling with this empty grid. Now he just gets right into it

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 2 роки тому +13

      The thing that should have amazed you is before he put it up the puzzle he said one of the possibilities was "a grid with nothing in it". I think that's amazing because this is the only empty grid Sudoku that has ever been featured. It would be like him going to a zoo and having to guess what the next cage is going to have in it and him commenting it'll probably be a unicorn and it's a "🦄".

  • @unspeakablevorn
    @unspeakablevorn 3 роки тому +273

    Of the 362,880 possible layouts for a block, 288 (exactly 1/1260th) are valid entries for the two-digit-prime squares, and half are diagonal mirror reflections of the others (for instance, 235 489 167 vs 241 386 597). I find it funny that blocks 3 and 5 turn out exactly the same!

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 3 роки тому +4

      Are there sudokus where blocks 3 , 5 and 7 ( or 1 5 9 ) are the same or does that break at least one of the other boxes ? (not with these rules added etc)

    • @BrooksMoses
      @BrooksMoses 3 роки тому +11

      Oh, expletive. And here I spent a good 30 minutes stuck trying to find a solution for block 5 that would fit the constraints from the other blocks, and the solution to it was right there for me to look at. That's hilarious!

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 3 роки тому +5

      @@highpath4776 It can have three clones. You can also put clones in boxes 2, 4, 9 | 2, 6, 7 | 1, 6, 8 | 3, 4, 8 . That would be the boxes that could hold three clones because the center squares do not see each other. Not only that but I have created a puzzle that has three clones in it purely by accident and one of them is in a box while the other two is offset and crossing more than one box. In fact this puzzle will be going into the archive very soon. The puzzle having clones is not even part of the ruleset I had said the arrangement was purely accidental so now I tell the solvers there is an "Easter Egg" in the puzzle.

    • @jeffreyblack666
      @jeffreyblack666 3 роки тому +2

      ​@@highpath4776 Yes, and even if you were provided with that box, that still isn't enough to get a unique solution. There are still so many options it isn't funny.
      You can even try for more symmetry (but I don't have a solution count checker to check for it)
      It is possible for all the boxes to be in groups of 3.
      e.g. boxes 1, 5 & 9 are identical; boxes 2, 6 & 7 are identical and boxes 3, 4 & 8 are identical.
      And even then you can still have loads of solutions, as you can permute all the different numbers (362880 different possibilities), as well as permuting the rows within boxes, the rows of boxes, the columns within boxes and columns of boxes.
      What I want to know is there only 1 possible solution with trivial permutations, or are there more, non-trivial permutations?
      And how many clues need to be provided to solve it with this constraint?

    • @Tepalus
      @Tepalus 2 роки тому

      Actually... There are not THAT many possibilities when introducing prime rules. I have layouted what looks to be a key to it of some sorts. Now, in addition to this, the top left corner of a box always is even (or 5 I think). So really limited in terms of setting.
      000/000/258
      000/258/039
      258/039/017
      Where in the diagonal two digits have to be next to each other and form an L-shape with either 3 or 9. I.e.
      0/0/8
      0/5/3
      0/0/0
      And bottom right has to be either 1 or 7.

  • @glennmelven3414
    @glennmelven3414 3 роки тому +538

    An empty grid that doesn't need a lot of Sudoku to solve it, but you must have good knowledge of primes, addition and know how magic squares work.
    I love CtC, where else can you find such great content?
    And we have Mark and Simon sowing us how to solve them.

    • @WatchOnYT
      @WatchOnYT 2 роки тому +2

      I suggest you go watch "mind your decisions". It's similar, not cryptic, but similar.

    • @rontyson6118
      @rontyson6118 2 роки тому +1

      @@WatchOnYT I like both. 😀

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 2 роки тому +2

      I would argue there is a lot of Sudoku done in this puzzle. Remember all the triples for Boxes 2, 6, 7, & 8? Getting triples is doing Sudoku. Box 3 had quite a bit of Sudoku also he used Box 1 and Box 9 to help figure that one out by eliminating digits before he used the constraint. Also at the end Boxes 2 and 8 had a flurry of Sudoku to narrow down the possibilities before the constraint in Box 8 was used. After that constraint was used it was all Sudoku to finish it off. It could be easily argued that over 50% of this puzzle was Sudoku.

    • @nesicvojin
      @nesicvojin Рік тому

      so you need to know what is a prime number (everyone knows it no metter age), how to add 2 numbers (not even gonna talk about it) and how magic squares work (also eveyone knows and its even explained)... this speeks for itself

  • @nici1252
    @nici1252 2 роки тому +98

    I've never played a game of sudoku in my live and yet it's oddly relaxing to just follow the logic that's being explained

  • @Alex_Meadows
    @Alex_Meadows 3 роки тому +801

    I feel sorry for box 2 :(

    • @itsmeagain1745
      @itsmeagain1745 3 роки тому +106

      I felt sorry for box 5 - it looks to be the same as box 3 at first glance. Yes - the same triplets, so Simon melting his brain when the answer is already there...
      So incredibly focused that he got tunnel vision - not for the first time.
      7 minutes of solving and he never noticed the box 3/5 clone even at the end.
      Mind you - he finished the puzzle - I never even started it. My brain melted reading the 'manual'!

    • @CJ_squared
      @CJ_squared 3 роки тому +25

      BOX 2 SOLIDARITY ✊✊

    • @itsmeagain1745
      @itsmeagain1745 3 роки тому +3

      @@CJ_squared Go box 2 ftw

    • @emphyriohazzl1510
      @emphyriohazzl1510 3 роки тому +52

      @@itsmeagain1745 nice observation but I m affraid he didn't have vision tunnel at all there : it ended up being clones but through different logic, there was no inherent logic forcing box 5 being a clone just from having the same row triplets (as far as I can tell, I might have tunnel vision too ^^).

    • @itsmeagain1745
      @itsmeagain1745 3 роки тому

      @@emphyriohazzl1510 You could well be correct - it just seemed to me that the triples would give the same logic as he worked out earlier. But what do I know - these puzzles are usually way beyond my skill level.
      It would be interesting for Simon to comment on this.

  • @Gonzalo_Garcia_
    @Gonzalo_Garcia_ 3 роки тому +76

    27:59 for me. That was awesome. I can’t believe this is solvable at all. Incredible. I thought it was going to be much harder, but some of the constraints are more restricted than what I initially thought. Kudos to the setter for being able to create such a thing like this.

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 3 роки тому +1

      There is another one in the Discord CTC fan page by the same setter. It is called "Disjointed Primes". It is in testing right now but should be very soon in the archive. Imagine just three 3x3 killer cages, zero given digits and a little killer with no value. All of this with a much easier ruleset. There is also an Easter egg in it. If you are on Discord then you can find it in the testing area but like I said it should be going into the archive very soon.

  • @AJRingmaster
    @AJRingmaster 2 роки тому +10

    Stumbled across this just before bed, and instead stayed up an extra hour. Genuinely riveting, absolutely delightful watching you puzzle through this. You explain your thought process wonderfully.

  • @crustylyra
    @crustylyra Рік тому +9

    This is the first puzzle I was able to solve in one session without having to get any clues/encouragement from the video. Thanks for making these, it’s been a great spring break trying, and mostly failing, but learning a lot. Took me just under an hour.

  • @inspiringsand123
    @inspiringsand123 3 роки тому +106

    Let's get cracking: 04:52
    And how about this video's Simarkisms?!
    Sorry: 10x (04:16, 12:27, 22:30, 26:06, 26:42, 27:18, 35:14, 37:40, 37:40, 39:17)
    Clever: 5x (12:39, 13:42, 20:44, 36:18, 52:37)
    Hang On: 4x (02:42, 14:20, 26:25, 31:32)
    Surely: 3x (35:20, 36:59, 41:20)
    Bobbins: 2x (22:30, 30:14)
    Good Grief: 2x (02:19, 03:42)
    Naked Single: 2x (29:16, 50:07)
    Three In the Corner: 2x (14:14, 14:36)
    Lovely: 2x (17:01, 30:53)
    Beautiful: 2x (14:55, 23:54)
    What on Earth: 1x (35:27)
    Useless: 1x (10:14)
    Secret: 1x (05:37)
    The Answer is: 1x (22:57)
    Break the Puzzle: 1x (36:07)
    By sudoku: 1x (18:49)
    FAQ:
    Q1: What is a Simarkism?
    A1: A Simarkism is something that Simon and Mark typically or frequently say.
    Q2: How do you do this so fast?
    A2: I'm not made of flesh and blood, but of sand ...
    Q3: Why don't you include 'XX' and 'YY'?
    A3: Probably it's already on the list ('Scooby-Doo' for example), but not mentioned in this video. But if you think it's not, tell me what you'd like me to include and there's a good chance I'll add it!
    Q4: You missed 'XX' at 'YY:ZZ'!
    A4: That could very well be the case! Human speech is hard to understand for computers like me, especially British sometimes! Point out the ones that I missed and maybe I'll learn!
    Q5: Could you turn these statistics into videos?
    A5: I've been playing around with the idea and I'm open to input as to what people would like to see. Let me know if you are interested in this and/or have suggestions.

    • @peppermint2133
      @peppermint2133 3 роки тому +5

      This is beautiful, you legend

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 3 роки тому +4

      I don't know how I could have missed this one. I was looking for it. I'm glad I took another look.

    • @ihatewindows3914
      @ihatewindows3914 2 роки тому

      This is hurting my eyes with all that blue

    • @antonliakhovitch8306
      @antonliakhovitch8306 23 дні тому

      Good bot.

  • @XL-5117
    @XL-5117 Рік тому +9

    This is the absolutely last channel I thought I’d ever watch! This guy is a genius, I get stuck on easy puzzles 😂, and I’m bowled over by magic squares, geometry and special rules! Total respect!

  • @rossmcdermott5699
    @rossmcdermott5699 3 роки тому +25

    While I am in constant admiration of your reasoning skills, I wish I had the skill to even attempt to set a puzzle like this. It boggles my mind that someone can think of a logical path to create a puzzle like this.

  • @JayBea
    @JayBea 3 роки тому +56

    I came so close - right up to the final few steps. Then, tragically, I discovered a contradiction that had remained hidden for ages. I made a hasty assumption when doing box 5 that didn't cause a problem until the very end! I was almost proud of myself. Regardless, amazing puzzle.

    • @mrwess1927
      @mrwess1927 3 роки тому +4

      Thats a learning moment, great job!

  • @SMTRodent
    @SMTRodent 3 роки тому +41

    Open puzzle.
    Read rules.
    Close puzzle.
    Watch video.

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 2 роки тому +1

      I don't think you are alone. With the quality of puzzles that they get most of the time watching the video is the default mode... LOL

  • @plumbum8284
    @plumbum8284 2 місяці тому +3

    I had so much fun trying to work out the prime boxes on my own. Very impressed with myself for figuring out the centre box on my own

  • @CinderellaCostallas
    @CinderellaCostallas Місяць тому +2

    I've never been more intrigued by a man solving an overly complicated sudoku

  • @longwaytotipperary
    @longwaytotipperary 3 роки тому +35

    Your cheerfulness in receiving this puzzle and working your way through it is awesome!

    • @Y_Llew_Tew
      @Y_Llew_Tew 3 роки тому +5

      Simon’s reaction to puzzles like this changed after he solved “Chaotic Wrogn” (a.k.a. The Second Movie).

    • @longwaytotipperary
      @longwaytotipperary 3 роки тому

      @@Y_Llew_Tew When was that?

    • @Y_Llew_Tew
      @Y_Llew_Tew 3 роки тому +1

      @@longwaytotipperary About 9 months ago - ua-cam.com/video/zfIomUELg6c/v-deo.html

    • @longwaytotipperary
      @longwaytotipperary 3 роки тому +1

      @@Y_Llew_Tew Thanks!

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 3 роки тому +1

      @@Y_Llew_Tew I think that video was probably one of his best videos ever. It seems when Mark slips Simon a puzzle and tells him not to look at it until the video is on usually turns out to be a great video. I think Simon even though he may say differently truly enjoys the challenge of the surprise.

  • @mati124
    @mati124 2 роки тому +10

    its impressive how you can stay focused for such long time and not get distracted.

  • @boredomreliever3850
    @boredomreliever3850 2 роки тому +24

    Your videos are really addicting… never thought I’d spend an hour watching someone else do sudoku without me getting distracted but here I am!

    • @Wakaflockabach
      @Wakaflockabach Рік тому

      I have to wake up at 530am for work. I found this channel 2 weeks ago, so i havs quite the backlog of videos. I often find myself watching CtC until midnight. Even as late as 1am some nights. For example, I was up until 1230 last night. It's 1130 as I type this and I swore I would be in bed by 10... the problem is I'm addicted to football and this, so on Sunday, Monday, and Thursday, football goes until 11 at the earliest. Then for some reason I have to watch CtC and that's an hour. And all the sudden it's 1230am smh. This channel is highly addictive and I love every second of it and don't regret an ounce of sleep I've lost.

  • @magicrealms5514
    @magicrealms5514 Місяць тому +1

    That was one of my favorite cryptics of all time. I might print it out and save for a future go once it has escaped my mind.

  • @RoderickEtheria
    @RoderickEtheria 3 роки тому +26

    When you get to 41:31, you can quickly rule out 569 and 659 in b5's lower row. Neither 5 nor 6 can appear in the ones digit of a two-digit prime. So the 5 and 6 must both make their prime entirely in the row, but they cannot both be in the other digit in the row's tens position, so if you put 569 in the bottom row of b5, you are saying that either 56 or 65 is a prime number, but neither of these is prime.

  • @FileCode1459
    @FileCode1459 2 роки тому +3

    no need to apologize about taking too long to solve! this is the third one-hour long video i watch from you and it's really entertaining following your train of thought to solve them, even if it takes a while there's absolutely no rush

  • @philipmiller0802
    @philipmiller0802 3 роки тому +13

    I'm glad I didn't look at the video length before trying this one... it took me a looong time but I did finish it. This is now my new record for length of video of a puzzle I solved. What a pleasure.

  • @TartAppleJuice
    @TartAppleJuice 7 місяців тому +1

    The fact that I was completely focused and engaged in an hour long video with no edits says a lot. You're awesome!

  • @logiciananimal
    @logiciananimal 3 роки тому +122

    Great puzzle. (1) I note with amusement that "j" and "w" are both letters with many pronunciations across languages, so having a name with them is a good metapuzzle for everyone! (2) Somehow, I am reminded of my crazy puzzle idea: "reverse sudoku" - the idea would be the player would be given a full grid of digits, but have to place rules that entailed them in the right way. E.g, you'd be told there was a three cell arrow, 3 black kropki dots, etc.

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 3 роки тому +1

      In this case the pronunciation is :
      Jo which will sound like "jaw". Da will sound like "duh". Wo will sound like "wa"ter. [ Jodawo = JawDuhWa ]

    • @Tfin
      @Tfin 3 роки тому +3

      @@Jodawo Nah, I don't care if it's actually your name, the correct pronunciation is obviously "Yoda Foe."
      😀

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 3 роки тому

      @@Tfin I got the pronunciation straight from the horse's mouth.

    • @julia970y6v
      @julia970y6v 3 роки тому

      The letter 'r': "Hold my uvular trill"

    • @carbon1255
      @carbon1255 3 роки тому +1

      @@julia970y6v You mean the Japanese L?

  • @DMike92.
    @DMike92. 9 місяців тому +1

    "Satisfying video" as they says on the web, just watching the genius you are solving them! Bravo.

  • @kasia1950
    @kasia1950 2 роки тому +4

    I just discovered your channel and told my friend about you and he was like "this guy sounds like the Bob Ross of puzzles" and I was like yes!!!! Nailed it

  • @TiramisuSPD
    @TiramisuSPD 3 роки тому +87

    I think it would be really cool to see you and Mark react to a solve from last year, before this sort of thing was even feasible! It would be interesting to see what your reaction is to the early variants.

    • @Y_Llew_Tew
      @Y_Llew_Tew 3 роки тому +22

      Even more interesting (but sadly impossible) would be Simon and Mark from 2019/20 reacting to one of the latest puzzles. All it requires is someone inventing a time machine…

    • @amoswittenbergsmusings
      @amoswittenbergsmusings 3 роки тому +4

      @@Y_Llew_Tew The implication of a time machine is that the second law of thermodynamics is broken. If entropy can be reversed, the dead can rise again - bodily. And all of a sudden Mahler's 2nd symphony is in my head: "Aufersteh'n, ja aufersteh'n wirst du mein Herz, in einem Nu!"

    • @thereoncewasalimerickwriter
      @thereoncewasalimerickwriter 3 роки тому +3

      @@Y_Llew_Tew I'm on it.

    • @jklroxmysox111
      @jklroxmysox111 2 роки тому +2

      @@amoswittenbergsmusings Your comment is way above my pay grade, mate

  • @tmmlis002
    @tmmlis002 3 роки тому +3

    Loved this one! I foolishly tried it myself and gave up after staring at my incomplete magic square; resigning myself to watching the genius of Simon cracking it instead. Time excellently spent.

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 3 роки тому

      In this puzzle where to start is well hidden. Once you find the starting point it logically pushes you in the right direction. It's almost like the puzzle does not allow you to stray from the path once you find the start.

  • @tejasagrawal4908
    @tejasagrawal4908 9 місяців тому +1

    One of the best puzzles. the way Simon solves it is amazing..

  • @niallsb
    @niallsb 3 роки тому +8

    "There may be a better way of doing it." 47:37. I think I've got a cleaner solution for you all. I'll put it below for spoilers. Pausing at the current time should give you a pretty good picture of my logic, I hope:
    So if you consider the top row and ask yourself how 6 can make a prime it cannot horizontally as 56, 65, 69 & 96 are all composite (not prime). Therefore 6 has to make a prime vertically with the second row and the only valid number in the second row is the only odd number: 7. Therefore 6 is above 7. Now, consider if 6 is above 7, 5 and 9 must be above even numbers (2&4) so they can't make a prime vertically and will have to make a prime horizontally with each other as 59. Therefore 6 cannot be in the top-middle box or it would split up 5 and 9 and because 6 is above 7, 7 is also out of the center box in its row.
    Let's talk about the middle row now. Simon already eliminated the 2 from the left middle box. Let's consider 4 and if it could be a horizontal prime. It could only be that if it were 47, but now that 7 is out of the middle box the only valid 47 would place 4 in the middle and 7 on the right. But placing that 47 would prevent the 2 from being able to be placed anywhere as 2 is already out of the left box. Therefore 4 MUST be a vertical prime and because it's even it must make a prime with a third row digit. Which digit? Well not 8, that's even. And not 2 because we've already proved that 2 is above the 3. 4 therefore must be above the 1, 2 above the 3 and by elimination 8 MUST be above the 7.
    If you examine the square at the time stamp you and imagine there's no 7 in the middle box you can now see that the only column in box 5 that could place a 7 above an 8 is the left column. 7 in the middle left square, 8 in the bottom left. 6 goes above the 7 in the top left placing 59 in the remaining two top squares. We know 8 must make 83 so 3 is in the bottom middle, 1 in the bottom right, 4 above it in the middle left and 2 in the middle. There: clean. Simple? Nah.
    Hopefully that's easy to follow along. That was the logic I used to solve the middle square in any case.

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 2 роки тому +2

      Very nice deductions. One thing that might help when doing the Prime Box is that the middle square is always a 258. 258 only has two prime Enders 39. That means two out of three of the 258 have to share one of the Prime ender 39. If you experiment, you'll find the only way the puzzle does not break is that one of the sharing cells is in the center. That would have made Simon put the 2 in the center cell. Everything else would have fell into place with much simpler deductions.
      Another characteristic of the Prime box is that there's only four Prime Enders 1379. Two of those numbers need to be in the bottom row. In the other two rows, there needs to be one in each to create a valid Prime Box. Knowing those two characteristics would make disambiguating the Prime Box much easier.

  • @raistlin_dourden
    @raistlin_dourden 3 роки тому +8

    I never cease to be amazed by Simon's genius

  • @jasmijnvanvelzen110
    @jasmijnvanvelzen110 2 роки тому +3

    And yet again I watched the whole video without realising

  • @IcarusGravitas
    @IcarusGravitas 3 роки тому +1

    No need for an apology! Every minute of that was very enjoyable to watch.

  • @ragnkja
    @ragnkja 3 роки тому +52

    I’m not a huge fan of puzzles where the rules aren’t the same across the whole puzzle, but I will still enjoy watching Simon solve it.

    • @HopUpOutDaBed
      @HopUpOutDaBed 3 роки тому +14

      well it's hard to have a completely blank grid AND universal rules since you need to break the symmetry somewhere or else the puzzle will have multiple solutions and be unsolvable.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja 3 роки тому +4

      @@HopUpOutDaBed
      You can have a directional rule that applies to the whole grid, and that’s fine.

    • @PauxloE
      @PauxloE 3 роки тому

      I guess the rules could have been worded more generically (instead of "in box X", it could just have been some marker in the grid for each), but then you wouldn't have a completely empty grid at the beginning. (Some restrictions are needed to break the symmetry and make it uniquely solvable.)

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja 3 роки тому +1

      @@PauxloE
      You can’t get a unique solution with a blank grid unless the rules have some kind of asymmetry to them. They can still be the same for the whole grid.

    • @PauxloE
      @PauxloE 3 роки тому

      @@ragnkja True, the "two-digit numbers are read from left to right or top-down" is already such a kind of asymmetry in this example (though it still allows mirroring across the diagonal). Do you have an example of an empty puzzle with just global rules?

  • @indigoziona
    @indigoziona 7 місяців тому +2

    I managed to solve this after watching half the video and also trying a bunch combinations out to see if they 'worked', so not with cool logic, but I enjoyed it so much - thank you 😁

  • @muskyoxes
    @muskyoxes 3 роки тому +117

    It always seems weird to me when a puzzle gets like 2/3 of its digits in and we're still using non-sudoku rules to make progress. If i saw a classic sudoku with 2/3 of the digits given, i'd assume it'd be elementary to solve it.

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 2 роки тому +15

      I would argue there is a lot of Sudoku done in this puzzle. Remember all the triples for Boxes 2, 6, 7, & 8? Getting triples is doing Sudoku. Box 3 had quite a bit of Sudoku also he used Box 1 and Box 9 to help figure that one out by eliminating digits before he used the constraint. Also at the end Boxes 2 and 8 had a flurry of Sudoku to narrow down the possibilities before the constraint in Box 8 was used. After that constraint was used it was all Sudoku to finish it off. It could be easily argued that over 50% of this puzzle was Sudoku.

    • @seinfan9
      @seinfan9 Рік тому

      The point of the advanced rules, other than upping the difficulty, is to constrain to a unique solution.

    • @KayJay01
      @KayJay01 Рік тому +4

      Once you get to that stage, yes, you could "solve" it by using normal Sudoku rules. But the result would not necessarily follow the specified non-sudoku rules, which is why it takes so much extra effort even if most of it is filled out.

  • @ULTRAV1OLE7
    @ULTRAV1OLE7 Рік тому +3

    I'm probably the LEAST math inclined person you'll ever meet.
    However I am trying SO HARD to keep up. This is so fun to watch be solved!!

  • @epsilonisevil1988
    @epsilonisevil1988 3 роки тому +21

    53 minute Simon video with an empty grid...yeah I think I'll just watch this one 🤣

  • @danielrobinson9893
    @danielrobinson9893 10 місяців тому +1

    I just found your channel, and I'm glad i did. Your brilliance is an inspiration. The way puzzles refine the mind and encourage lateral thinking is incredible!

  • @sampathkumar-ej7xl
    @sampathkumar-ej7xl 3 роки тому +19

    This channel has woken up sleeping giants around the world who are outdoing one another to come up with more and more incredible number arrangements to fit into a sudoku grid. Very enjoyable!
    Do we call them Matth Daemons!

  • @dk8101
    @dk8101 4 місяці тому +1

    Simon is an absolute genius. It'd take me a long time to get to a point where I can understand this

  • @rebeccaaustin8996
    @rebeccaaustin8996 2 роки тому +13

    My favourite thing you do in all your videos is you never assume we know something that is obvious to you. Like you were just explaining the magic square and you said there are three ways of making 6 but in sudoku you can't use a 3 twice. That's obvious but I really Appreciate you clarifying things like that when explaining the process of solving these puzzles. I have to really concentrate on understanding your puzzle solving and often have to pause the video and listen to you word by word to understand what you're saying lol. (Not saying you're bad at explaining, your very good at explaining but sudoku doesnt come naturally to me) Also other times you've explained something that is so obvious to me now I know it but wasn't obvious to me when I first started. Iv watched your videos for years. I'm quite good at sudoku now.. not as good as you tho 🤣. Thanks for making sudoku fun for everyone even the beginners and the not so academic like myself. And I mean this is the best possible way, your videos do send me off to sleep most evenings. I think it's your therapeutic voice. The annoying thing is I never make it to the end to see the solution. 🤣

  • @rebekahapps9828
    @rebekahapps9828 Рік тому +1

    I’m not sure if you’ll see this, as the video is 1yr old but i’ll comment anyway. I struggle badly with anxiety and oftentimes find it hard to fall asleep. Now, don’t take this the wrong way, but your videos have been helping me to relax and fall asleep for a while now. I can’t begin to tell you how valuable that is to me. Thank You.

  • @bluji1250
    @bluji1250 3 роки тому +254

    I feel like there's still a little too much grid in this sudoku... how about one where there's just an audio clip describing a sudoku that you need to construct yourself?

    • @felipevasconcelos6736
      @felipevasconcelos6736 3 роки тому +53

      You joke now, but we’ll see who’s laughing in 2031 when Simon takes 12 hours to place the first line of the grid.

    • @RichSmith77
      @RichSmith77 3 роки тому +24

      @@felipevasconcelos6736 "We'll use blue for major box lines, because they both begin with b, and orange for minor cell lines"

    • @jonahcomstock3061
      @jonahcomstock3061 3 роки тому +10

      In 2040 Simon solves a Sudoku from first principles.

    • @somyso3634
      @somyso3634 3 роки тому

      Underrated comment

    • @SG2048-meta
      @SG2048-meta Рік тому

      @@jonahcomstock3061 In 2050 Simon takes 23 days to come up with 3 possible sets of rules to form the upper left pixel of box 1, and afterwards takes 46 days to construct the rest of the single cell so he can solve a sudoku from first principles, those principles you have to figure out yourself of course

  • @Queffty
    @Queffty 2 роки тому +2

    Decided to give this one a try on a whim. 274 minutes and two pages of notes later and I've solved it. What an absolute joy of a puzzle!

  • @JCassidy3383
    @JCassidy3383 3 роки тому +4

    It is absolutely fascinating and pure joy watching you work through these, thank you for sharing your gift.

  • @BasicallyBananas
    @BasicallyBananas Місяць тому +2

    I love how the top right and center square are identical :)

  • @lvl99weavile23
    @lvl99weavile23 Рік тому +4

    This man’a just thinking out loud and I’m here for it

  • @oniauckland858
    @oniauckland858 Рік тому +2

    I started this video out of bored curiosity. But watching you slowly logic it out, I became absorbed. Watched the whole video and I don't even play sudoku. 😂

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo Рік тому +1

      There is one called "Chaotic Wrogn" by Undar Beyond. Simon's reaction to seeing it is priceless. When you look at it, you will probably think to yourself how is this solvable.

  • @tomgraham3612
    @tomgraham3612 3 роки тому +3

    He COULD have told you in the directions that box 5 was a clone of box 3. But he didn't. And so much fun was born!

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 3 роки тому +1

      I calculated how many different Prime Box layouts there are. It turns out there's 288. The chances of two of them out of the three possible being the same would be 1.038%. Nothing in the rules seem to force this to happen.
      The math I used was the birthday paradox. It's where it calculates the chances of two people having the same birthday in a group of people. In the paradox it asks how many would need to be present to just have a little over 50% chance of two of them having the same birthday (23, btw). I just substituted Prime Boxes for people to get the calculation.
      The random chance all three of the Prime Boxes were the same? The chances would be better for you to get dealt 2 four of a kinds in a row in 5 Card Stud poker.

  • @HCR2_Actuary
    @HCR2_Actuary 2 роки тому +1

    What an elegant puzzle! Hats off to the creator for such a unique puzzle with no givens and only one solution. Well done solving this!

  • @gdshoe5822
    @gdshoe5822 3 роки тому +48

    Simon: "Probably it's going to be a grid with nothing in it, or some crazy stuff in it"
    Me:
    (I'm shocked that I got this one to solve, though I did take a lot longer than Simon -- not surprisingly.)

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 3 роки тому +1

      I think it was crazy how he guessed it was going to be a grid with nothing in it. It was one of his two choices that he had guessed. This channel has never seen a completely empty grid so for it to be the first thing out of his mouth is quite a prediction. The last huge video I can remember where he was asked to open it when the camera was running was one called "Chaotic Wrogn". He took one look and basically said "No, I'm not doing that!?". It turned out to be one of his best videos. This puzzle and that puzzle are polar opposites of each other. One is clean and completely devoid of anything while the other looks like Pollock set the puzzle.

  • @mute1085
    @mute1085 3 роки тому +7

    This was so weird and different from pretty much every sudoku I've solved before.
    I loved it!

  • @untitledcat1636
    @untitledcat1636 3 роки тому +215

    Congratulations Jodawo, you just made the most visually minimal and empty Sudoku grid ever set in the history of Cracking The Cryptic!
    No big digits.
    No tiny digits.
    No Cages.
    No Thermos.
    No colored hints.
    Nothing in the grid.
    Nothing outside the grid.
    Nothing.
    Just a grid.

    • @craigspaulding9711
      @craigspaulding9711 3 роки тому +27

      One of the longest rule sets though, but I don’t think can be helped

    • @Stephen-Fox
      @Stephen-Fox 3 роки тому +9

      It could have been an irregular, and also had no thick lines.

    • @theYoutubeHandle
      @theYoutubeHandle 3 роки тому +16

      next video: no grid

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 2 роки тому +4

      Wait till you see Empty Grid 2. It'll only have specific rules for 3 Boxes instead of 8 that this one had. There will be less rules. Also when you finish the puzzle, there's a huge Easter Egg.

    • @untitledcat1636
      @untitledcat1636 2 роки тому

      @@Jodawo *gulp*

  • @Mardines007
    @Mardines007 Рік тому +1

    Brilliant Logic in this puzzle. Simon never stop to amaze us with his ability to figure it out.

  • @Arronode
    @Arronode Рік тому +3

    Bro i've been watching these & now when i play something like league of legends & have a kill set-up that the enemy can't escape, i hear in my head "Ah ok, so now that's a kill, by-sudoku."

  • @hacklordmonster8780
    @hacklordmonster8780 Рік тому +2

    I like how my reactions go between HOLY SHIT HES A GENIUS and HOW DOES HE NOT SEE THAT ‏

  • @IcyGregy
    @IcyGregy 3 роки тому +5

    My math brain is VERY pleased with this puzzle. I'm amazed at the great solve! Lovely work

  • @GregBoydGritchu
    @GregBoydGritchu 2 роки тому +2

    "What do we do now. Do we think about even digits... or is that MADNESS?"

  • @PauxloE
    @PauxloE 3 роки тому +18

    I thought "I know primes, let's try this one."
    I started with the squares - wrote down the (directed) graph from the pairs, and noted that it has a path of length 5, which can only go into the (3×3) grid starting at the top left and ending on the bottom right (so 8 and 9 were fixed, 1 and 4 had two places left). Due to the 6 also getting the 3, this fixed the 6, and then I got the two options for the 25.
    Next I took on the magic square, but remembered the logic wrong, which got me into a contradiction after another long time (and then I restarted it).
    For the primes, I wrote down all combinations of digits which make primes, and noted that all of 2, 5, 8 only give primes as first digits with 3 or 9 as their second digit (and therefore 3 and 9 needed to serve 1 and 2 of the others each). "This must be significant!" - it means that those 5 digits were quite restricted in where they could go (relative to each other, and at all). (Also, the 6 only forms a prime as 61 and 67, which can be later used for box 5.)
    I somehow didn't get the "there are 3 digits left in each column" idea (I don't usually solve Sudokus, this shows), so it took me a lot longer to fill the bottom left box, but I got it (and then also the top left box) correctly (with the 28 pair still unresolved).
    I managed to partially fill box 6 and 8, like Simon had at 33:35 (with several more corner pencil marks in Box 8 - and I managed to find out that R9C5 could not be a 3, because it was needed in the sum). I then tried the middle box, and got a lot of pencilmarks in there, but was stuck for a long time. I gave up, watched the video until Simon showed that there must be a 7 in the middle row, and from there succeeded on my own. [After knowing that there is a 569 row, it's clear that the 9 must be the last digit and before it a 5 to make that one a prime (the 3 was in the other row too far away), so you can only go 659. And then the 6 needs a 7, so this row needs to be on the top, which fixes the 7 in the middle row. Then both the 8 and the 2 need the 3, and the only way for the 4 to get a prime was with the 1, which fixes the remaining digits.]
    Took me 162:06 after the restart due to the wrong magic square (including watching half of the video).

    • @erictheepic5019
      @erictheepic5019 3 роки тому

      I worked on this on and off for a few days and just cracked it. I tripped myself up majorly very early in the logic by doing most of the magic square and box 1, but failed to do the tiniest bit more logic on the magic square to disambiguate the 1 and 3 in box 1, which made much the other solving a true headache.
      The trick I used for the prime boxes was the idea of ending and beginning digits. A two-digit prime can never end in 2, 4, 5, 6, or 8, so it must instead always end in 1, 3, 7, or 9. From there it was some nice colorful logic in each box, placing where beginning and ending digits must go. I didn't do any digit logic (what primes can be which) until I had the color map filled out, at which point the digit logic was easy. In the case of box 5, I had to disambiguate via trying the digit logic for two possible colorings, which was only necessary because I failed to realize how to place 6 in box 6. Remarkably, I didn't have the same trouble as you with the 7 logic in box 5. My deduction is incredibly hit or miss.

  • @Chloe-ju7jp
    @Chloe-ju7jp 3 роки тому +1

    Can't believe I watched this in full. His explanations we're really good most of the time and kept things followable and engaging

  • @adrianameyer1848
    @adrianameyer1848 3 роки тому +5

    I’m impressed how someone can make such a sudoku

  • @Jannyl13
    @Jannyl13 2 роки тому +1

    I had a long train ride to go on, so I brought pencil and paper, wrote down the rules and tried my hand at this Sudoku. It took me a total of 6 hours to solve (because I got stuck for quite a while halfway through) but I managed to solve it and had a blast.
    Love your logical and calm approach to these puzzles!

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 2 роки тому +1

      Simon did have a little problem with Box 5. It was his first time really working with this constraint. If I told you, that in all cases the center cell of a Prime Box will have the numbers 2, 5, or 8. Those numbers have only 3 or 9, as a prime ender, that they can use to be a 2-digit Prime. That means that two of those numbers has to share a prime ender. You will find that one of those three digits that has to share will have to occupy the center cell. The right bottom cell will always be a prime ender (1379). I have a feeling with these two pieces of information it would have made the solve a little bit easier.

  • @bluerizlagirl
    @bluerizlagirl 3 роки тому +3

    This is just sublime!
    Every time I think they can't possibly create another miracle Sudoku, someone does. But surely there is nowhere else after this?

  • @dewaard3301
    @dewaard3301 3 роки тому +1

    There's so much beauty in a difficult, but humanly doable puzzle, where the rule set is as elegant as the path towards the solution.

  • @Swisswavey
    @Swisswavey 3 роки тому +7

    That took me 80 minutes and even though I got bogged down for a long while I'm quite happy with the time.
    It was a fun puzzle that got the old, grey cells working.

  • @dabbo8660
    @dabbo8660 7 місяців тому +1

    I love how Happy he looks After solving It ❤

  • @MarushiaDark316
    @MarushiaDark316 3 роки тому +3

    Been waiting for a puzzle like this for a while where there are no given digits. Well done, Simon.

  • @kazli6156
    @kazli6156 5 місяців тому +1

    I’m so proud I cracked this by myself without having to get hints from these geniuses!!

  • @Jodawo
    @Jodawo 3 роки тому +3

    For the prime boxes the main break into those is to realize that 2, 5, and 8 need either a 3 or a 9 as their end digit to make them Prime. You will then see that in the center Square there has to be a 2, 5, or an 8 because that number needs to share an ending digit with one of the other two that is left. So when he got two Box Five he would have been able to just write in the 2. He had a little trouble with that box but when you work with that type of constraint you will see that there are only a few ways to place the prime enders and non-prime enders.
    I was glad to see Simon explain the magic square in detail because I can imagine when that first came up in a puzzle it was a concept that needed to be figured out now we can pretty much pencil mark the whole box without even thinking about it.
    I think Simon did a marvelous job solving that puzzle for only seeing the constraint only once that is if he caught Mark's solve of the "Anniversary Sudoku" puzzle.

  • @louishernandez04
    @louishernandez04 7 місяців тому +1

    I just passed through the thumbnail of this video and without watching it first, I try for myself to solve an empty grid sudoku, it took me 20 mins to solve (error checking included), and I'm genuinely having fun while solving because I thought this would be simple just by adding the numbers 1 to 9 in order in the first row and first column, but I ended up changing their orders so that I could solve the sudoku

  • @TurquoizeGoldscraper
    @TurquoizeGoldscraper 3 роки тому +15

    At first I was like, nah I'll just watch Simon do it, and after he started coloring it, I foolishly thought I'd give it a try first...
    It took me 50:20 and I'm glad I went for it, this was so weird and amazing.

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 3 роки тому +1

      It probably was the correct way to do that. Watching Simon in the beginning so he can give you a clearer assessment of the rules. Sometimes if you're solving and you misunderstand a rule it can cause quite a headache trying to figure out what's going on or why it's not working. Sometimes it's good to try a puzzle before you watch the whole solve on video. If you do end up finishing it it's actually more exhilarating then if you watched someone else do it even if the video turned out great. I actually think that's why people will say the book was better than the movie because our minds can fill in so much and do what CGI just cannot do. For this puzzle, being able to finish it in under an hour looks like a great accomplishment and you should be proud of yourself.

    • @TurquoizeGoldscraper
      @TurquoizeGoldscraper 3 роки тому

      @@Jodawo Yeah, I've made that mistake.

  • @andymion
    @andymion 3 роки тому +1

    This might be one of the most beautiful sudoku's (or any puzzle) I've ever seen.

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 3 роки тому

      I think Simon did a great job of making this puzzle look so much fun to do. The way he tentatively went through each of the steps with some confidence but also with trepidation. When he was explaining the rules how he seemed to light up when he saw the Magic Square. You knew he was happy because something in there was familiar. It was also fun to see him start with the Magic Square and realize it didn't help too much and he had to go to another stage that he was not too familiar.
      It was also amazing to see how he chose a path through the puzzle that seem to be the right one and it went so fluid. It might have been a blank canvas that he started with but the way he solved it showed what a great masterpiece it actually is.

  • @Rubrickety
    @Rubrickety 3 роки тому +3

    What a strange and delightful construction! I was quite content to let Simon tackle this one, though.

  • @evaleopardflight3887
    @evaleopardflight3887 10 місяців тому +2

    "it is mad, absolutely mad, but it is solved."

  • @RainShinotsu
    @RainShinotsu 3 роки тому +29

    I'm frustrated that Simon seemed to skip over an entire rule (box 1: all square numbers must be entirely contained within the box) but it's good to see that he guessed that rule anyway.

  • @crystalmaniac1648
    @crystalmaniac1648 3 роки тому +1

    I am not sure how I ended up here. But 'Oh, Bobbins!' has earned my subscription and my like immediately 😂

  • @ericpraline1302
    @ericpraline1302 3 роки тому +5

    Just over an hour of my life which I will never get back, but that's fine, it was very happily donated to a very absorbing puzzle. The way the primes resolved was particularly magical, though box 5 took me much longer than Simon.

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 3 роки тому

      The other thing to consider is 2, 5, & 8 need to have a 3 or 9. That means someone has to share or the puzzle will be broken. After further analysis of this type of ruleset, you will find that the middle square will always have a 2, 5, or 8. The 2 would have been a write in as soon as he found the possibilities. Since 7 was proved to be in the fifth row in box 5, a 39 could be pencil marked into the cell below the 2 (r6c5). 58 could be pencil marked in cell r6c4 because the 39 needs to be shared. After that you can deduce r6c6 will be 1. After that the Magic Square and box 6 become disambiguated. No need for bifurcation.

  • @SimonBreadLoaf999
    @SimonBreadLoaf999 Рік тому +1

    this guy seems decently wholesome I’m maybe 40 seconds into this video never seen a video before but he seems cool and happy watching even just now I got tingles surprisingly it was wholesome enough I smiled which I rarely do 😭this is kind of Asmr for me this vid honestly

  • @ianleonlo
    @ianleonlo 2 роки тому +4

    this was dope af. like a mathmatical mic drop on sudoku. im stunned this was doable at all

  • @NicknotNak
    @NicknotNak 2 роки тому +2

    I have been watching since the beginning of the pandemic, and I have to say that these videos fill a very specific spot in my entertainment library. I dont always watch them, but I do come back to them whenever I just need to turn my brain both completely off and also activate whatever math/logic it takes to get the answer one second before you 20% of the time.
    I cant really explain it, but its very specific and can only be found here.

  • @gagesiana7793
    @gagesiana7793 3 роки тому +3

    So did anyone else think that when he said 369, then we can do the song. Think of "Get Low" instead "3 in the corner" 🤣🤣🤣

  • @thatdudefromthehood2960
    @thatdudefromthehood2960 11 місяців тому +1

    I don't even play sudoku, I'm more into minesweeper, I don't understand anything but i like how this guy explain it so its kinda interesting. love this video

  • @956675
    @956675 3 роки тому +4

    One of the best I've seen. That was a nice way to end what has otherwise been a terrible day.

  • @palacerevolution2000
    @palacerevolution2000 Рік тому +1

    55 minutes. But I am still learning the advanced reasoning from you. Got stuck several times. And I had the magic square right early on. Until I actually applied some Sudoku, and realized I had it inverted. Your reasoning is phenomenal. I find myself wanting to rush, and complete boxes; but end up in a cul-de-sac.

  • @yerel_nimni_avni
    @yerel_nimni_avni 3 роки тому +3

    That's the holy grail of sudoku, I've tried to compose something like that ever since I've seen the miracle sudoku.

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 3 роки тому +1

      It may be the Holy Grail of Sudoku, I will give you that. This is just the first. I do believe there will be others and this one is just setting the bar for those to come.

  • @planchapain1
    @planchapain1 3 роки тому +1

    That's absolutely Incredible. The setting is stunning.

    • @Jodawo
      @Jodawo 3 роки тому

      There is another one from the same setter that uses those same constraints. Mark is actually doing that puzzle and it's called "Anniversary Sudoku" by "Jodawo". If you search the name along with the name of the setter it should pop right up. It was done in commemoration of 3 years of doing Sudoku like puzzles.