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Sudoku Puzzles
Learn to play sudoku!
Sudoku
Puzzle Secrets
More information on sudoku
Sudoku Videos
Sudoku Training for the Brain
Sudoku is the addicting new puzzle craze that is sweeping the globe.
Walk along the streets of most major cities worldwide and you'll be hard-pressed
not to see at least a single person bent over sudoku puzzles. Sudoku puzzles,
which are also popularly known as the Number Place, was originally a game
puzzle published for a newspaper in France.
Sudoku is played on a 9 x 9 grid, made up of nine 3 x 3 sub-grids. The
goal of Sudoku is to fill in all the squares with the correct numbers.
Sudoku is a simple looking game and yet is very challenging. This is a
very low-cost hobby that definitely bestows a good work out for the brain.
When you first encounter the Sudoku puzzle, try not to think about mathematics.
There are lots of schools of thought on the best way to solve your sudoku
puzzle but I like to start with the obvious. Analysis is the final approach
to solving a Sudoku puzzle.
Clearly, logic is not the only factor at work in Sudoku puzzles. Number
puzzles very much like sudoku puzzles have already been in existence and
have found publication in many newspapers for over a century now. From
the information I have been able to gather it appears the sudoku game
has its origins in the 1700s by a Swiss mathematician named Leonhard Euler.
Sudoku puzzles, also referred to as Number Place in the United States,
are said to be deceptively simple, since a player can start the game quite
easily only to find himself later on getting stuck in the middle of the
game with no clear puzzle solution in sight. However, if we look at the
game of Sudoku puzzles more closely, we can actually identify some basic
reference to concepts that are of purely mathematical nature. While Sudoku
puzzles appear to continue boggling the minds of many puzzle addicts,
it is interesting to note how the puzzles can be solved with relative
ease by many computer programs.
If you start playing Sudoku puzzles you will learn pretty quickly why
it is considered one of the most addictive puzzle games in history. Howard
Garns, a 74-year-old retired architect and freelance puzzle constructor,
was considered the designer of the modern Sudoku puzzles. During the revival
of what was originally the number place puzzle in Japan, publishers abbreviated
the phrase "suuji wa dokushin ni kariru" which literally meant
"the digit must remain single", and came up with the more popular
name, Sudoku Puzzles.
A new 'Free Sudoku Host' website has been created which permits you to
just pop in YOUR Sudoku puzzle, and then send it ANYWHERE you want thru
the net.
Sudoku, you can learn it in 10 seconds, and yet the logic needed to solve
Sudoku is fun, mind-boggling and relaxing--all at once. So try out a little
Sudoku today.
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