Constellation Sudoku

Special clue numbers related to the difference between numbers in two adjacent cells and values of the stars in the "constellation" make this a doubly interesting problem.
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Problem

by Henry Kwok

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Constellation Sudoku

Rules of Constellation Sudoku

Like the standard sudoku, the object of the puzzle is to fill in the whole 9x9 grid with numbers 1 through 9 so that each row, each column, and each of the nine 3x3 squares must contain all the nine different numbers.


There are special clue-numbers placed on the border lines between selected pairs of adjacent squares of the grid. Each clue-number is the difference between the two numbers that should be in the adjacent squares just above and below that clue-number. For example, a clue-number 7 on the border line means that one of the possible answers in the square above the clue-number can be 9, 2, 8 or 1. If we choose 9 for the answer in the cell, it means that the answer in the square below it is 2. If we choose the answer 2, it means that the answer below it is 9.


The sudoku has two solutions when only clue-numbers are given, so a set of 15 digits {1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4, 5, 5, 6, 7, 7, 8, 8, 8, 9} are also given to reduce those two solutions down to a single unique solution. The stars represents the positions for each digit from that set.


Hence, this puzzle is called 'Constellation Sudoku'.