X-Git-Url: https://git.cworth.org/git?p=cworth.org;a=blobdiff_plain;f=src%2Fpuzzles%2Fstar_duel.mdwn;fp=src%2Fpuzzles%2Fstar_duel.mdwn;h=07c1a4006e4177c84757e335a3af9c4b134fef35;hp=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000;hb=dfd1655d9b759f1bea89a89e4afa52047cbf4e09;hpb=f59b790a8532212b6194ff7e63c2fa35b107be0a diff --git a/src/puzzles/star_duel.mdwn b/src/puzzles/star_duel.mdwn new file mode 100644 index 0000000..07c1a40 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/puzzles/star_duel.mdwn @@ -0,0 +1,45 @@ +[[!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!