There are two ways one can group all the strategies for Sudoku: by difficulty and by family. Difficulty is rather subjective but necessary, for example, when selecting the order in which strategies are tried by the solver. Some strategies will always be easier for some people to spot than others, but I believe I have chosen an ordering which is not too controversial. So the main documentation has a side menu organised by difficulty.
Below are these strategies organised into themes.
There is a new
Introduction to Sudoku and an article on
Brute Force vs Logic for those curious.
With chaining strategies, there is definitely a theme going through them. This theme is all about bi-value (only two candidates left in the same cell) and bi-location (only two occurrences of a particular candidate left in the same unit) pairs and the incredible number of deductions one can make from them. You will find, if you read through this group, that earlier strategies become part of a more general theory as the theme develops. Thus, for example, Remote Pairs are a subset of XY-Chains; that is, XY-Chains is a more general approach of which Remote Pairs are a specific instance. Do read the introductory articles
Introducing Chains and Links and
Weak and Strong Links.
Exotic strategies do overlap with chaining ones, but they have a peculiar flavour of their own and some wonderful, if obscure, logic. They are definitely worth presenting as a demonstration of people's ingenuity but you will only need to have recourse to them on the extreme puzzles.
There are naturally special strategies for Jigsaw and Killers because of their differences. These are now included for the first time on this site.
This strategy list is by no means complete. Many strategies can be further extended and we do not have a complete theory of all Sudoku puzzles. If you are interested in the concepts behind creation and grading, there is a PDF document here called
Sudoku Creation and Grading. With the community's help I hope to extend the documentation here.
For those people wondering why "
Escargot" cannot be solved by the solver, there is an article on this special Sudoku
here. This is an early 'ultimate puzzle' but this crown has been usurped by the puzzle created by
Arto Inkala, which is also in the example list.
I've been looking at a new idea for
measuring the difficulty of very hard puzzles - ones that can't use the standard scoring because they don't complete.
I'm pleased to include on this web site the
Sudoku Song (MP3 file) by Peter Levy (official
web site here). Peter wrote and recorded this song a couple of years ago and managed to capture the essence of the Sudoku craze to great acclaim.