Featured Puzzle: Arukone (Number Pairs) #2
Once again, the ancestors seek connection for Dia de los Muertos. This time, they appear in pairs. Connect each pair of skulls with lines.
Once again, the ancestors seek connection for Dia de los Muertos. This time, they appear in pairs. Connect each pair of skulls with lines.
Oh, the weather outside is frightful… Connect each pair of identical snowflakes with orthogonal paths.
A traditional gift for Valentine’s Day is a bouquet of flowers, usually roses. Rather than gathering a bunch of identical flowers, I thought it would be more interesting to match up pairs of flowers. Connect each pair of identical flowers with orthogonal paths.
Shade four cells in each region to place exactly one L, I, T, or S-tetromino there. Shaded cells form one orthogonally contiguous area.
Shade four cells in each region to place exactly one L, I, T, or S-tetromino there. Shaded cells form one orthogonally contiguous area.
Shade four cells in each region to place exactly one L, I, T, or S-tetromino there. Shaded cells form one orthogonally contiguous area.
Today, we have a “couples” variant of L.I.T.S. Normally, you need to shade 4 cells in each region to place a single tetromino. In Double L.I.T.S., you must shade a total of 8 cells, to place two tetrominoes in each region.
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.
Place one tetromino in each region such that all of them are orthogonally contiguous, no tetrominoes of the same type are adjacent, and no 2×2 area of cells is covered.