[[!meta title="Star Duel"]]
[[!tag puzzles]]
I just had [my second
puzzle](http://www.gmpuzzles.com/blog/2014/12/star-duel-carl-worth//)
published at [GM Puzzles](http://www.gmpuzzles.com). Take a look.
This puzzle is a Star Battle, which is an elegant and easy-to-learn
puzzle type. All you have to do is place some stars into the grid such
that exactly one star, (or more stars for larger puzzles), appears in
each row, column, and bold region. Also, no two stars can be placed in
adjacent cells, not even diagonally.
For the puzzle I published today, I took a couple of steps beyond the
basic Star Battle formula. First, I made the grid quite large, (15x15
with 3 stars per row/column/region). Then I also provided two
grids. Each grid has the same solution of stars, so you work back and
forth between the grids to solve them both simultaneously. Finally,
instead of dividing the regions into random-looking arbitrary shapes,
I tried to make some recognizable pictures with the grids. If you
click through above, hopefully you'll be able to recognize the shapes
I was going for. This puzzle marks my first in a series of puzzles
where I chose the name of the puzzle type as the theme for the
puzzle. So, I drew a star battle for a Star Battle puzzle. And with
dual grids, I named this battle a Star Duel.
Finally, I should point out that where my previous puzzle
was published on a Monday,
today's puzzle is published on a Saturday. The GM Puzzles website
publishes puzzles that get increasingly difficult throughout the
week. So if you've never attempted a star-battle puzzle before, I
don't actually recommend you start with my puzzle from today.
Instead, you might start with this simpler star
battle puzzle that I wrote as part of a Christmas puzzle hunt for my
boys. It's a very gentle introduction to the puzzle type. If you try
it, you can ignore the second grid with the C, H, A, and S
regions. That was part of a metapuzzle included in the puzzle hunt.
Happy puzzling!