The Way of Kakuro: Volume 1
by
Nikoli
Order:
USA
Can
Kodansha International, 2006 (2006)
Paperback
Reviewed by Hilary Williamson
I
've been addicted to
Sudoku
lately, so had to try the new Japanese number puzzle craze,
Kakuro
. The layouts of this logic game look rather like crossword puzzles (with a number at the head of each row and column), and they vary in shapes in a similar way.
I
n this case, all the cells in the row (or column) must add up to the number at its head. Cells can include any digit from 1 to 9, but digits cannot repeat in any row or column. The trick is to get familiar with how sums can be broken down into numerical combinations where the digits don't repeat (a chart is provided for easy reference). I tried to jump into the deep end with an easy puzzle but found it much simpler after reading the book's tutorial, which gives basic strategies to get you going, for example by examining choices at
crossroads
.
T
he book includes 95 (increasingly difficult) puzzles, with solutions at the back. Each also comes with target completion times (for beginner, intermediate, and expert) so you can see how you did (not telling you my times!) If
Sudoku
hasn't given you enough of a headache - or even if it has - move on to the mind-boggling, possibly even more addictive
Way of Kakuro
.
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