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| Well done Eliza |
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| 1. |
Eliza |
120 |
| 2. |
James |
110 |
| 3. |
Stephen |
100 |
| 4. |
Lyn |
90 |
| 5. |
Leo |
80 |
| 6. |
John |
70 |
| 7. |
Dave |
50 |
| 8. |
Charlie |
40 |
| 9. |
Emma |
30 |
| 10. |
Dean |
20 |
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Baffling to most but utterly enthralling to a select audience, there’s no doubt that Sudoku has rapidly become the puzzle of choice for newspaper-hogging commuters. And, as you’ll frequently now spot a Fifth-generation iPod as the time-killer of choice on the trains, what better game to put on it than this one?
The object of the game is to fill a 3x3 grid with the numbers from 1 to 9, but as the individual grid is just one in a group of nine (again, arranged 3x3), the number mustn’t be duplicated on the same line – either horizontally or vertically. In theory it sounds difficult to grasp, but in practice it’s painfully simple to understand.
This iPod version is missing nothing, so you get various game modes, five different skill levels and a detailed tutorial mode. You can even assign various numbers to squares as notes, helping you to solve the more difficult puzzles. A very, very good game indeed.
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A perfect game for the iPod format and an essential purchase for all fans. |
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The above scores are for the number of Journey Points earned. |
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You can turn on Error Checking, which makes it much easier to fill up the grids, but you will lose Journey points if you do. |
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Use the Pencil mode to experiment with different numbers – you can easily delete them if they’re wrong. |
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