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The Daily Sudoku Overview

About The Daily Sudoku

Are you looking for a new way to challenge your brain every day? Then, allow us to introduce you to The Daily Sudoku. From simple grids for beginners to more difficult ones for advanced players, this game will provide you with a daily new challenge. 

Features like notes and auto-cleanup let players focus on playing without interruptions. Best of all, you can play daily sudoku puzzles whenever the mood strikes from your tablet, smartphone, or computer.

 

How to Play The Daily Sudok

Daily Sudoku has straightforward rules. You have nine smaller 3x3 boxes out of a 9x9 grid. The game's objective is to fill the digits 1 through 9 in every row, column, and box without repeating any digit inside those sections. 

As we said already, you get a new puzzle every day. So, this is an ideal daily routine to sharpen your problem-solving skills. Mondays have the easiest puzzles; as the week goes on, the difficulty increases. Sunday's puzzles usually present the ultimate test for players.

If you are playing Sudoku for the first time, here are some basic tips to help you get better:

  • Look for any empty cell in the grid with just one missing number—this provides a simple starting point for solving the puzzle.
  • Search carefully for numbers that might show up just once in a given row, column, or 3x3 box. Filling in these numbers will open more grid possibilities.
  • Using reasoning and elimination instead of guessing can help you quickly solve the challenge. If you know a number only fits in one spot inside a row or column, mark it down and continue from there.

 

Advanced Daily Sudoku Techniques 

Learning advanced techniques will pay off if you want to move on to more challenging Sudoku puzzles.

  • The X-wing technique will let you identify which numbers do not fit in particular cells. Imagine there are four rectangle-shaped cells. In two rows and two columns, you find that two of the cells have the same possible number. You can eliminate that potential number from any other cell in the same rows or columns.
  • Though it uses three rows or three columns rather than two, the Swordfish technique is similar to the X-wing. Imagine three rows or columns, each with three cells with the same number. Once you find that pattern, you can confidently eliminate that number as a possibility from every other cell in those rows or columns.

If the advanced techniques seem complicated, stick to the basic techniques. What are you waiting for? Try the Daily Sudoku today.