![]() Using color blocks will also allow you to turn the SuDoku playfield around and thereby e.g. ![]() So using nine different colors seems not only be a pretty looking solution, but might also allow even small children, chimps and most aliens to play SuDoku (the guys from Proxima Centauri wont read this anyway, and they may build it with sound blocks). Ĭolors, on the other side are represented in our brains in areas other as abstract symbols as numbers or letters, and we are pretty good in the interpretation of visual information. But one could use any other nine-member set of symbols, as letters, signs, emojis. , 9) as the "objects" to fill the arrays, as these are symbols known to most of us, and fit nice into a 3x3 array. Usually we are using the numbers one to nine (1, 2, 3. In addition, all nine different objects shall to be found once in every of the nine columns and any of the nine rows.Īs a starting point, several of the objects are placed at predefined positions, and you then have to fill the empty spaces such that the final result fulfills the rules described above. The smaller arrays are to be filled with nine different objects. The classical SuDoku is a 3x3 array of nine 3x3 arrays. I suppose that if you are interested in this Instructable, you may have an idea what SuDoku is about. If you are interested, please come back from time to time You can't do this that simple in paper SuDokus. This allows to experiment with different decision options if you get stuck, trace the stones set after one of the ways were taken and remove them if it has been the wrong one. One of the cool features of the recent version is that one can label the bricks with small tags. The version on the last picture was build at first and uses a 48x48 knob base plate. ![]() But the version without large caps (images 2 & 3) is more colorful, better to play and my current favorite. Especially the version with double bricks and the large flat cap (image 1) is looking cool. The first two versions showed above are using plates, are the recent versions. On the pictures in this and the following steps you will find different versions of the "LEGO color SuDoku". Or just pick the version that fits best for you. I am still improving the concept and will report the results here.īut I hope you like the idea and will get some inspiration to build your own versions. I have experimenting with a number of layouts, and have not worked out all details for every LEGO color SuDoku version presented here. We have boxes full of Legos that have been accumulating over decades, so I thought it shouldn't be a problem to find enough of the right bricks. So I was wondering if it might be possible to build one myself, using some abundantly available, colorful parts, namely LEGO bricks. But I neither have their craftsman skills nor the required equipment. I found that thegnome54 had described another very nice version of a color SuDoku. When I saw tdonoclifts' instructable for his Rainbow Su Doku, I was thrilled.
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