
Griductive vs. Sudoku: Two Different Theories of What a Logic Puzzle Is
I built Griductive. People often compare it to Sudoku — and the comparison is natural. Both are daily logic puzzles. Both guarantee one unique solution. Both reward careful, methodical reasoning over guessing. But they are genuinely different kinds of puzzles, built on different design philosophies. This article is about what those differences actually are. What Sudoku Is Most people know Sudoku as a number puzzle. That description is misleading in an important way: Sudoku has nothing to do with numbers. The digits 1–9 are arbitrary symbols. You could replace them with colors, letters, or emoji and the puzzle would be mathematically identical. What Sudoku is about is uniqueness in groups : place exactly one instance of each symbol in each row, each column, and each of the nine 3×3 boxes. Three constraint types, one elegant grid structure, and every puzzle ever made is a variation on those same three rules. That simplicity is a genuine strength. Sudoku was invented by American architect
Continue reading on Dev.to
Opens in a new tab


