I love listening to the logic you employ to set these and it occurred to me that you speak like a sculptor and the logic ‘reveals’ itself to you as you form it. Like the puzzle is hidden in the grid and you bring it to fruition ❤
At 1:06:55, another approach is that if there is the 343 ten sequence that Simon missed, that would create a known 1, 3 and 6 in column 7 which forces the remaining two cell ten sequence to be 28. This proves that the 2 pencil mark in column 7 of box 3 is indeed correct.
I love listening to the logic you employ to set these and it occurred to me that you speak like a sculptor and the logic ‘reveals’ itself to you as you form it. Like the puzzle is hidden in the grid and you bring it to fruition ❤
I am voting for ¨ Differ by at least two¨
At 1:06:55, another approach is that if there is the 343 ten sequence that Simon missed, that would create a known 1, 3 and 6 in column 7 which forces the remaining two cell ten sequence to be 28. This proves that the 2 pencil mark in column 7 of box 3 is indeed correct.
Yes, luckily for the logic even 343 as the 3 cell puts a 2 on the ten line in that box