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Killer Su Doku 1: The Deadly New Dimension
 
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Killer Su Doku 1: The Deadly New Dimension [Paperback]

Collins
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 180 pages
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers (Feb 2006)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0061126470
  • ISBN-13: 978-0061126475
  • Product Dimensions: 20.3 x 13.7 x 1.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 461,701 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
79 of 83 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
UK killer addicts be warned. This book is the USA publication of The Times Killer Su Doku (black, red and white cover, been available in UK for ages). The only difference I can find is that the mistakes in puzzle 91 have been corrected. It is a slightly larger book but the size of the puzzles is the same. The paper is rougher and the rubbers I use are better on the smoother UK version.

I've given it a 5* rating because, if you haven't already worked your way through enough copies of the UK book to have learnt all the puzzles by heart, it does have puzzle 91 corrected and gives Su Dokuers a choice of paper quality. I prefer the smaller size of the UK version. The puzzles are significantly better than those in other killer books, but in the absence of Killer book 2,3,4 etc I have to make do with inferior puzzles. I take comfort from the fact that the USA book is titled Killer Su Doku 1, implying that there will at last be more books coming.

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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful
Far too easy 24 Aug 2007
Format:Paperback
If you're an absolute beginner to Killer Sudoku then this might prove useful.

Otherwise, it's hopeless. It provides absolutely no challenge to anyone who enjoys Killer Sudoku. There isn't a puzzle which can't be completed in less than 5-10 minutes, no challenge at all.

I'm not being a big brain snob here, but there are so many definitions of tricky, deadly & the rest out there. Even the Times "Deadlies" are generally very do-able compared to some others whose "trickies" can leave me stumped with only 3 or 4 numbers filled in.

This is for kids, sorry.
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Amazon.com:  21 reviews
29 of 31 people found the following review helpful
Now Add Some Math 7 Jun 2006
By Joshua Koppel - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Killer sudoku is my favorite sudoku variation (with the possible exception of killer samurai sudoku). The game is the same in many ways. The grid layout is the same. The logic for solving is the same. The completed puzzle is the same. But the clues, the clues, are different. Unlike with traditional sudoku, you will not start with a partially filled puzzle grid. Although I have seen a handful where one or two numbers is given, usually no numbers are provided. So how do you solve these?

Well, instead of the standard partially-filled grid, the puzzler is told what the relationship is between groups of squares. You may be told that two connected boxes have a sum total of eight or you may bee told that five connected boxes have a sum total of thirty-three. But whatever you are told, each box has a relation to others. What you fill in follows the standard Sudoku rules but some of the elimination and possibilities are similar to those in Kakuro. For instance, if two boxes add up to four, then they have to be a one and a three. you just don't know which.

These regions of relationships can range from just one square to nine or more. Just remember that sometimes one of these regions will contain the same number twice or more because it spans multiple rows, columns and subgrids. Ouch. Wrapping you mind around killer sudoku can take some getting used to but I find it a wonderful puzzle that combines classic sudoku with the mathematics of Kakuro. The result is one I find highly entertaining and am happy is finally being collected in quantity instead of just a few.

This volume contains a short section on how to solve the puzzls and thwn 110 puzzles in five levels (Gentle, moderate, tricky, tough, and deadly). If you are looking for a new dimension in sudoku, check it out.
23 of 25 people found the following review helpful
a Good Collection of Puzzles 30 May 2006
By B. B. Trammell - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
I was hoping to be the first person to review this one, but it appears I'm a couple of days late. When I bought it, I was unsure about whether it'd be good or not because there were no reviews.

ON KILLER SUDOKU:

I had first encountered Killer Sudoku in Will Shortz's Favorite Sudoku variations. I liked it so much I wanted to get more. It may seem like Killer Sukoku is just some cheap knock off of the original, but I'd say it's what the original should have been. In fact, it'll probably make you bored of the original like it has for me. Killer Sudoku is so much more complex, and gives you a lot of oppurtunities to apply logic that don't exist in the original. It gets to the point in the original that to make them the most difficult, the puzzle solver must resort to the chore of possibility testing to figure it out. In Killer Sudoku there's a lot of tricks you can do involving the sum regions, and that keeps it interesting.

Although regular Sudoku has numbers, it doesn't work with numerical values (the numbers could be replaced with letters or even meaningless symbols and you'd still be able to figure it out). In Killer Sudoku the numerical values are crucial to figuring out the puzzles; most of them give you no starting numbers and only give you sum regions instead.

ON THIS BOOK:

One of the first things I noticed was the Sudoku borders are in BOLD BLACK and that makes them easy to see. In Will Shortz's book with Killer Sudoku, the borders were lighter and less noticable, and I'd sometimes lose track of which 3x3 square I was in. What the first reviewer said about difficulty is mostly true. It rougly gets more difficult from puzzle 1 to 110, but I've found hard ones sooner than they should be and I found a lot of easy ones later than they should be. In fact, I found that the whole "Deadly" section wasn't any harder than the previous section. I really don't know how they came up with the goal times for these. For a few of them I finished in less than half as much of the goal time. For others I used much more than the goal time.

I found puzzles 78 and 98 to be the two most difficult ones. Puzzle 78 has a number in a certain area that looks valid, but really it isn't if you look further. Without finding it, I don't think you can make progress. Puzzle 98 involved a sum region trick I had never needed to use before. It took me forever to think of it. I'm very certain you can't go on without figuring it out.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
Lots of Fun 18 Jan 2007
By Senor Brujo - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
In my opinion, Killer Sudoku puzzles are much more fun and satisfying to solve than regular Sudoku puzzles because of the added complexity of the sums and the various techniques that can be employed to solve them. "Killer Su Doku 1: The Deadly New Dimension" contains 110 puzzles of which there are 17 Gentle, 30 Moderate, 42 Tricky, 16 Tough, and 5 Deadly puzzles. Each puzzle has a suggested time to beat. There is also a two-page "Guidelines for Solving Killer Su Doku".

I didn't find the guidelines for solving to be particularly useful. They give a quite minimal explanation of how to solve these types of puzzles and leave out explanations of some of the more important techniques for solving, such as the 45 Rule. (Steve Arons book, "The Official Book of Killer Sudoku" contains a much more comprehensive introduction.)

Regarding the suggested times, I didn't specifically time myself, but I often noticed that I took much less or much more time than what was suggested. As for difficulty, I found that sometimes a puzzle in a given section was either much harder or much easier than what was implied. The puzzles in the Deadly section were no more difficult than the ones in the Tough section. The hardest puzzles in the book are 78, 98, and 105. I eventually figured out some interesting equations and relational techniques for solving 78 and 98. (Whew, that was fun!) Puzzle 105 is the only one that I have not yet managed to solve.

This brings me to a recommendation for the Solutions section. In general, I find the solutions in the backs of Sudoku books to be useless. If I finish a puzzle and it conforms to the rules then it's correct; otherwise it's wrong. I don't need a solution to tell me that. The only time I look at the solution is occasionally when I'm doing a really difficult puzzle and I want to check an intermediate result to make sure I'm on the right track so I don't end up having to erase the entire puzzle and start over. This also helps to instantly understand what type of mistake I made. Something that would be really helpful in the solutions for the really difficult puzzles would be to show a partially solved grid and an explanation of how to get to the next step.

On the whole I found this book to be very enjoyable and highly recommend it for any Killer Sudoku fan. Publisher, another one please!
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