WPF Sudoku Grand Prix — Serbian Round — 20th - 22nd April 2013 | |
LMI Tests -> Monthly Sudoku and Puzzle Tests | 149 posts • Page 5 of 6 • 1 2 3 4 5 6 |
An LMI player |
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An LMI Player with Sudoku ratings 500- |
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purifire |
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Odd Even & Twisted Classics (SM 16/17) Author Posts: 460 Location: India |
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purifire |
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Odd Even & Twisted Classics (SM 16/17) Author Posts: 460 Location: India | First of all Congrats to all the authors for the wonderful set of puzzles. My personal favourites would be Moveable, Killer, Frameless and Diagonally Consecutive. Most of the puzzles were weighted correctly but I felt few were over-rated. This in no way is an attempt to undermine the wonderful work done by the authors. The killer did not command such high points in my opinion, but then again that is just my opinion. The moment I saw the Little Killer, I simply skipped it knowing very well that it will be futile for me to waste time on that. From the looks even 200 points would be less given the time I would need to solve it. :) One more thing that as an author I prefer doing is keeping the puzzles in ascending or descending order of difficulty. Even a person is solving on paper, then it becomes chaotic trying to jump from one sheet to another, which can cause a lot of frustrating moments. Overall, it was a wonderful experience solving these sudokus. Good job guys. Rishi Edited by purifire 2013-04-23 1:14 AM | ||||||||||||||||||
connect4 |
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Posts: 7 Location: United States |
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motris |
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Posts: 199 Location: United States | And so that my point was clear, as I said in my first line, I think solvers can question whether a puzzle as hard as Little Killer belongs in a test like this. (My view is it is ok.) The question though is not how many points the puzzle should be worth IF it appears. To make it worth less than 157 just so the scoring overall looks "balanced" would be to grossly misrepresent the challenge it presents and cause even more frustration from solvers. Say the Quadruple was worth 50 and the Little Killer was worth 100. This would be FAR worse for the competition because the scores are grossly wrong. When such a challenging puzzle appears, the solver takes a risk to go after very large prize because they could get 0. And when they do get 0, they might complain because the competitive energy feels like they have underperformed. A similar situation is that no matter how long a test runs, about 50% of solvers wish it were about 1 minute longer. This is one of the most common comments. It does not mean my next LMI test will be 2 hours and 1 minute. I understand what the disappointment of "almost submitting" is. | ||||||||||||||||||
motris |
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Posts: 199 Location: United States | kishy72 - 2013-04-22 8:29 AM So if the test solver had taken say 25 odd minutes on the same puzzle would the puzzle be given 250 points which would amount to 1 quarter of the total points allotted to just one puzzle??! So yes, if this were the result and the puzzle was included, a 250 point value would be what I would argue for. But my test-solving comments would have been: "You know this puzzle is far too hard and you should make it easier, right?" And I would have certainly hoped the puzzle was edited before the competition. The problem is not with the point distribution, but with the spread of puzzle difficulty. There is no use wondering if there are other ways to allot the points besides test-solving times as none will be as fair as the method that is used based on these times. Provided the whole test can be finished -- and my testing and some of the results here shows that it can -- then having a 15-25 minute puzzle can be appropriate provided it is mentioned upfront with such a clear score. The Little Killer was one of the most memorable puzzles to me in this set because the tennis part of it leaped out so much and I can think of no other Little Killer that has ever themed its outside digits in such a surprising way. | ||||||||||||||||||
Realshaggy |
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Posts: 69 Location: Germany | Just a few words for the discussion. My personal feeling is, that the spread between 20 points and 157 points is too much for a contest for different reasons. First, because it makes the easy puzzles feeling almost worthless, even if the point distribution is fair and mathematically correct based on the times of the test solvers. (But I also like one or two easy low pointers for the last minutes to not waste time,and they shouldnt be on the first sheet, because this is what I'm solving while my slow printer is busy with the rest of the test). Second, it favours a special group of people, who are lucky enough that the hard puzzles fits their talents best. In this contest four of the high pointers were heavily math based. Third it adds too much luck. I think the propability of breaking a hard puzzle or not seeing a crucial step is much higher than for an easy puzzle, but you get no reward for taking this risk. Most of these puzzles have one or more very hard steps, the rest is easier. So these are also the kind of puzzles where from my expirience the test solver times differ most and the final points are often heavily under- or overvalued. It's even more luck, if the hard step is hard because it's something odd, and some solvers have seen it before. (My breakthrough in the Killer Sudoku was when I decided to sum up all regions, something you normally wouldn't do. If you are used to this kind of global conclusion, you really feel its overrated. Otherwise you're stuck.) And fourth, its a tough decision for the people who are in the range of possibly finishing all puzzles. (Thats not me, I'm one of the majority that can always choose the puzzles they like.) They dont know if they can finish or not, so what to do? Solve on personal preference? Solve from front to back? Back to front? What to do if the puzzles are not ordered in difficulty like in this test? I see some people on top of the score sheet with 15 minutes and only very hard puzzles left, they lost a lot of potential points. A puzzle contest should be about solving puzzles and not about gambling and mind games. But all in all thank you very much again for a very nice contest. Looking forward to the next rounds. Edited by Realshaggy 2013-04-23 3:51 AM | ||||||||||||||||||
prasanna16391 |
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2021 World Sudoku+Puzzle Convention Organizer Posts: 1801 Location: India |
I loved the Little Killer, as well as the Movable Digits, upon re-solving. Within the test, I really liked the Killer. The Tennis theme was put in wonderfully through the test, and it was nice that there were so many places where it kept coming up. Overall, I enjoyed the test quite a lot. Coming to the general discussion, I'd just like to say, I think the points distribution was fair enough by my experience. By now, I have a fair idea of my own strengths and weaknesses and I believe thats necessary for every solver to learn. Based on my prior knowledge it pretty much went to expectations except for the 2 broken puzzles. And there was a mix of easy-medium-hard which qualifies as balanced for me because it gives enough to all categories of Solvers to have a go at. However, I think the discussion of whether or not there should be such hard puzzles in a test is a bit more debatable. I think that, while its ok to have hard puzzles on a test, the 2 here in particular had a higher risk involved than the ideal case and thats the cause of most of the players' frustration. I believe its because, there are some variants where the rules themselves make the puzzle difficult to solve, like a Little Killer, Diagonally Consecutive (imagine ones with the converse rule coming into play a lot too), Movable Digits, Frameless, etc. I think these are generally difficult, because they depend heavily on uncommon logic, like diagonal neighbours/lines, transferring to grids, determination of cells for sum and so on, and its easy to make a mistake in these even on easier examples. So, I think, in the general sense, if one of the more normal variants like say the Renban Groups or Extra Regions is made to be difficult, it won't be noticed as much as say a Little Killer or a Frameless being difficult. Its what I'd keep as a base plan anyway. But obviously that is dependent on each author, and thats what makes puzzling fun, its the constructor challenging the solver after giving a rough estimate of the difficulty he will face :) | ||||||||||||||||||
Black Tiger |
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Posts: 11 Location: Iran |
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An LMI player |
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An LMI Player with Sudoku ratings 500- |
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FoxFireX |
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Posts: 35 Location: United States | Assuming the results hold, I'm just thrilled to have finally managed to get more than the participation point from one of the Grand Prix events. That's pretty much been my goal, so mission accomplished! And it's pretty much all thanks to Movable Digits. That was such an interesting variant that I couldn't pass it up, even with the huge points/difficulty, and for once the gamble paid off. I'll admit that I was completely oblivious to the theme while solving, but it is absolutely brilliant in hindsight. Enjoyed all of it I've done so far, and hope to at least approach the remainder later. | ||||||||||||||||||
Administrator |
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Location: India | Sudoku GP - Serbian round is over. The results will be public in a while (after Branko has a final review). Here is the link to solution booklet | ||||||||||||||||||
standupcanada |
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Posts: 11 Location: Canada | Loved the theme - though as usual I never fully catch on til after the fact (Canada v. Serbia this fall - we're just happy to be there). With respect to the points variance - my single voice/vote is I'm not a fan but can live with it when, as was the case here all the details are well known before the fact. For those who struggle with errors on killers (hand raised) it made this an easy test to decide what to skip. | ||||||||||||||||||
An LMI player |
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An LMI Player with Sudoku ratings 500+ |
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Cyclone |
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Posts: 8 Location: Canada | debmohanty - 2013-04-19 9:47 PM Cyclone - 2013-04-20 7:40 AM I find it more hilarious that you still didn't understand the rule.Additionally, I find it hilarious that my own posts are restricted from my view during the test. LMAO Oh, I understood the rule all right. I just would have thought your own posts would be exempt. EDIT: All right, I get the puzzle now (my comment was regarding the hidden posts rule, and I only see the reply today). I was under the impression that each clue was utilized once and only once for a different digit each. Therefore I was reading that, in the example of the 4, that column 1 was not solvable based on my perception of the rule, since no 4 was in the second column that could be moved. I just saw Para's post explaining it further and now understand that not every cell (on the right) has a clue, but it must be determined which clues (on the left) are shared by a cell (on the right). Not sure I can solve that one, but I'll give it a try now that I understand that. Ours brun - 2013-04-20 10:54 AM Cyclone - 2013-04-20 3:40 AM There is an error in the example. There is a 3 where there should be a 4 in the puzzle. I came upon this error when, in the first two columns, there was no 4. Therefore, because no 4 could be entered legally in the first column, the demo has no valid solution. This is confirmed with five 4s and seven 3s in the puzzle layout. No, there is not. This was explained in a very concise and clear way a few messages ago. See in particular this sentence, which seems limpid to me: Para - 2013-04-04 7:44 AM This doesn't mean that every cell must be one of its given neighbours [...] All digits which are given have to be in the final grid, but two given digits can correspond to the same definitive one; and a definitive digit does not necessarily have to correspond to a given one, since this is nowhere mentioned in the rules. The puzzle is perfectly valid, the explanations are just fine, the only problem here is the attitude you are showing despite the fact that you are wrong. So please learn to be slightly less arrogant and at the least, try to be respectful of the benevolent work of people who spend countless hours trying to help other players. Attitude? It was my first post in the thread, and what I thought was an error. There was no attitude whatsoever. Please accept my apologies if I came across that way at all, as I simply came to the forum to report what I thought was an error. And now I get what Deb meant by "rule" above (a puzzle rule). Clearly I didn't get that rule, then, at the time. I've given it another read since; see my edit above. Cyclone Edited by Cyclone 2013-04-23 10:10 AM | ||||||||||||||||||
Richard |
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WCPN Author Posts: 191 Location: The Netherlands |
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sanket |
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Posts: 17 Location: India |
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Richard |
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WCPN Author Posts: 191 Location: The Netherlands | Perhaps participating highly unprepared and tired after a long day working wasn't the best idea, but after I missed the German round (because of being an author to that test) already, I decided to give it a go. Unfortunately I messed up the diagonal consecutive and it took veeeeeery looooooong to finish the irregular and the frameless. But the puzzles as well as the theme were really nice, so I had a good evening in the end. Thanks for a good quality set of puzzles with good, well worked out, ideas. | ||||||||||||||||||
prasanna16391 |
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2021 World Sudoku+Puzzle Convention Organizer Posts: 1801 Location: India | Cyclone - 2013-04-23 9:41 AM Attitude? It was my first post in the thread, and what I thought was an error. There was no attitude whatsoever. Please accept my apologies if I came across that way at all, as I simply came to the forum to report what I thought was an error. Cyclone I think the main reason that your attitude was questioned is that you basically pointed out something thats been asked and clarified on this forum thread itself already. When there's multiple posts already in the topic its obvious you should read through in case your query's already been asked. Also, you didn't exactly ask or even address the possibility that you might be understanding the rules wrong, instead choosing to think that the authors and everyone else viewing the Instruction Booklet for the past few days missed all the easy-to-see contradictions you pointed out from your interpretation. | ||||||||||||||||||
Administrator |
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Location: India | Link corrected. | ||||||||||||||||||
skywalker |
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Sudoku Grand Prix - Serbian Round Author Posts: 42 Location: Serbia | Few months a go, Zoran gave a theme for our round. Tennis! Nikola didn’t have problem with this theme and created 8 sudokus in a short time. Branko created three more in next weeks. We had 11 sudokus with some similar patterns, but all looked well. After some time, Cedomir created 2 sudokus, Zoran one, Nikola added two more. And Movable Digits from Cedomir came in last days of competition booklet preparation, right on time. We made a selection of 16 sudokus, tested each other sudokus, and Thomas was so kind to test all in ones. We wanted to have enough easy sudokus, enough well-known sudokus and some challenging for best solvers. We hope that we achieved most of that. Congratulations to Jan Novotny for clear victory and to Bastien, Tiit, Kota and Michael for solving 15 sudokus. Once again, we want to say that we have excellent help from Thomas in testing and reviewing booklets and Deb in preparing contest. We also want to say that we made manual corrections when we have good reason to do that and we tried to be fair to all players. We are also really sad that we couldn't help to Jan Mrozowski. Score page: http://logicmastersindia.com/2013/04S/score.asp Nikola, Zoran, Cedomir and Branko Edited by skywalker 2013-04-23 1:01 PM | ||||||||||||||||||
debmohanty |
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Location: India | Congratulations to Rishi for making to top 10. I hope this is the worst result for Prasanna and Rakesh. And I am still waiting for Rohan to participate in this. I think his clock has stopped working. | ||||||||||||||||||
misko |
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Posts: 11 Location: Germany |
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KrtekHonza |
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Posts: 2 Location: Czech Republic | Thanks to the puzzlemakers! It was fun to discover thematic secrets - after the contest, of course. Thanks to all the participants! It is a big pleasure to browse through the result list again and again. I haven't seen my name on the top for quite a long time. Looking forward to the next sudoku competitons and to the next tennis battles between Serbia and Czech Republic in Davis Cup and Fed Cup... Krtek | ||||||||||||||||||
wgryciuk |
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Posts: 24 Location: Poland |
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