KenKen
KenKen, which began appearing in The New York Times in February, is a new numerical logic puzzle from Japan. The name means loosely “cleverness squared.”
KenKen shares some properties with sudoku. Each is a pure logic challenge in which numbers are filled in the squares of a grid. Unlike sudoku, though, in which the numbers act solely as symbols (letters or pictures would work as well), KenKen requires arithmetic.
The rules are simple: Fill the grid with digits so as not to repeat a digit within any row or column, and so the digits within each heavily outlined box (called a cage) go together using the arithmetic operation shown to make the target number indicated.
April 20, 2009 1 Comment
