Solve a Yajilin puzzle, size 10×10.

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Solve a Yajilin puzzle, size 10×10.
Solve a Yajilin puzzle, size 11×11.
this one turned out kinda dumb
Solve a Yajilin puzzle, size 10×10.
Solve a Yajilin puzzle, size 10×10.
PZV link
here’s the last yajilin for now, a fairly easy one. there are two tricky bits, one at the top and the other at the bottom, and the only tricky bit with the bottom one is proving that what happens will happen using logic
I will be debuting a new puzzle style next, which is a classic nikoli style. look forward to it!
Puzzle rules:
Shade some white squares black so that no black square shares an edge with another black square, then draw a single loop that visits each remaining white cell exactly once.
Gray squares with a number and arrow indicate the number of black squares seen in that direction starting from the clue. Note: There may be black squares that do not have a clue pointing at them.
PZV link
if the last yajilins have been too hard for you, then good news, here’s an easier one! this one is a pretty straightforward puzzle with standard yajilin deductions
Puzzle rules:
Shade some white squares black so that no black square shares an edge with another black square, then draw a single loop that visits each remaining white cell exactly once.
Gray squares with a number and arrow indicate the number of black squares seen in that direction starting from the clue. Note: There may be black squares that do not have a clue pointing at them.
PZV link
here’s another challenging yajilin. it’s got a lot of interactions between horizontal and vertical clues at the beginning as well as loop closing logic, so good luck!
Puzzle rules:
Shade some white squares black so that no black square shares an edge with another black square, then draw a single loop that visits each remaining white cell exactly once.
Gray squares with a number and arrow indicate the number of black squares seen in that direction starting from the clue. Note: There may be black squares that do not have a clue pointing at them.
PZV link
here’s a hard yajilin. it uses some unique logic to get the puzzle started, which might not be obvious if you haven’t seen it before. if you have trouble, think about how many shaded squares you can fit in a small region in a yajilin puzzle
Puzzle rules:
Shade some white squares black so that no black square shares an edge with another black square, then draw a single loop that visits each remaining white cell exactly once.
Gray squares with a number and arrow indicate the number of black squares seen in that direction starting from the clue. Note: There may be black squares that do not have a clue pointing at them.