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Fill the 9×9 gameboard with numbered coins, according to the universal rules of Sudoku. There are 81 coins, each marked with a number between 1 and 9. In order to avoid penalties, each row, column, and delineated 3×3 area can only contain one of each number.
The game begins with twelve coins already on the board, all in valid placements. Drop new coins in from the top of the board to make them land in the lowest empty square.
Placing coins: Find the playable coin at the top of the game board and the next-available coins on the upper left. To aid you in finding a valid placement, look for the glowing coins with the same number as the playable coin. If you want to delay using the playable coin right away, right-click to swap it with the next available coin. Left-click to drop coins into the game board. (Note: you cannot drop coins into a column that is already full!)
When you drop a coin into a square, the game will immediately check to see if the coin has been played in a valid position according to standard Sudoku rules. If so, the coin stays on the board and counts toward your final score. Jolly Rogers and Ghost Jolly Rogers: If a coin has not been played in a valid position (i.e., if the number played was already present in the same row, column, or 3×3 area) then the coin will turn into a black Jolly Roger icon. This results in a scoring penalty and should be avoided!
In addition to checking the validity of each coin as it is placed, the game also checks all empty squares to see if any of them have reached a state in which no number can be legally played. For example, if an empty square has the numbers 1, 3, 5, and 6 lined up beneath it and the numbers 2, 4, 7, 8 and 9 in the same row, then there is no number remaining which can be validly placed there. When this situation occurs, the afflicted square will be marked with a warning symbol in the shape of a red “Ghost” Jolly Roger. Be aware that Ghost Jolly Rogers are merely a warning, as the empty square still requires a coin in order to fill the column and finish the game.
Wild Gems: Each time you successfully complete a row, column, or 3×3 area with no mistakes, you will receive a bonus in the form of a blue Wild Gem that appears beneath the game board. Protect yourself from invalid plays by replacing Jolly Rogers with Wild Gems. This uses up the gem, but protects you from the scoring penalty that Jolly Rogers impose.
It’s possible to possess more than one Wild Gem and to earn multiple Wild Gems with a single play, providing you complete multiple regions simultaneously. If you have any unused Wild Gems left over at the end of your game, you’ll receive a scoring bonus for each one. You can earn as many as twenty-seven Gems over the course of a game, providing you play perfectly! Please note that if you complete a row, column, or 3×3 area that has a Gem in it, you will not be rewarded with a new one. Wild Gems are only awarded for rows, columns, and 3×3 areas composed entirely of coins, with no Jolly Rogers or gems present.
Wild Gems are a great way to avoid receiving a scoring penalty when you fill in a square marked with a Ghost Jolly Roger. If you have a Gem in your possession, just drop a coin that you don’t want into the required square to apply your Gem automatically. Earn lots of gems early on in order to protect yourself from the difficulties that accumulate toward the end of the game! Use the mouse to move the playable coin horizontally on top of the game board.
You don’t need to do anything to activate a Wild Gem. If you have one, it will be applied automatically the next time you make a mistake!
Get points for completing a row, column, or 3×3 area. The amount awarded is equal to 100 points, times a multiplier. The multiplier depends on what is completed:
When a row or 3×3 area has only two or three squares left, think carefully about how you fill them to avoid creating Ghost Jolly Rogers in the remaining squares.
Modern Sudoku was most likely designed anonymously by Howard Garns, a 74-year-old retired architect and freelance puzzle designer from Indiana.
The first Sudoku game was published in 1979 by Dell Magazines as “Number Place.”
The earliest pirates were the Sea Peoples who sailed the Aegean Sea in the 13th Century B.C.E.
The Classic Era of piracy in the Caribbean extends from around 1560 until the mid 1760s and consisted mainly of English and Dutch pirates.
Duration : 0:1:19
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