One-Man Band for a One-Year Anniversary!

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  • čas přidán 15. 05. 2024
  • Here's where you can play One-Man Band by Bren77: app.crackingthecryptic.com/4R...
    Normal sudoku rules apply. Box borders divide a line into segments with the same sum. White Dots separate values that are consecutive (not all dots are given). Every row, column and 3x3 box has exactly one hot cell (with a value equal to its digit plus one), and exactly one cold cell (with a value equal to its digit minus one). Every digit 1-9 is in exactly one hot cell and exactly one cold cell.
    ▶ OUR PATREON PAGE - JOIN THE COMMUNITY, SUPPORT US AND TRY OUR PUZZLE HUNTS◀
    / crackingthecryptic
    Coming up on the first of May we will bring you a fascinating sudoku hunt based on snake eggs by the great Philipp Blume. Join us for $2/month for the monthly reward, $3/month or higher to have access to solution videos. All members have access to a Patreon-only discord channel to discuss the puzzles and get help! (Lots of other great content on Patreon includes past rewards, cryptic crossword solves, more!) We really appreciate your support!
    Newly released on our Patreon site (completely free) is a new, beautiful pack of Fog of War puzzles by Sandra & Nala called ‘Joyful Moments.’ Go to our Patreon link above to access the puzzles.
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    Did you miss the Kickstarters for our books and e-book? You can now order them here: coffeebean.games/product-cate... Cracking the Cryptic’s Greatest Hits Vol. 1 and Vol 2, as well as the e-book editions of Fog of War (regular and deluxe editions), are all available!
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    Our main app (which is itself completely free) contains packs featuring Domino, Lines, and GAS puzzles, with a few special free sets as well! All the puzzles are hand-crafted by us and some of the best constructors in the world, with hints by Simon and Mark.
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    ▶ ALL OUR OTHER APPS ◀
    Do you love Killer sudoku puzzles? Need more practice on Thermo puzzles? Want to discover the secrets of Miracle sudokus? Check out our other apps! All our apps contain handmade sudoku puzzles by ourselves and many of the best constructors in the world, tested and hinted by Simon and Mark. Links are ALL here: crackingthecryptic.com/#apps or search for Cracking the Cryptic and the app name on your favourite app provider: Classic, Killer, Chess, Miracle, Thermo, Arrow, Sandwich, Domino and GAS 1 and 2, and brand-new Lines.
    ▶ SUDOKU PAD ◀ Input classic sudoku puzzles into our software. With 12 free puzzles:
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    ▶Credits◀
    Music: Tim McCaskey (Guitar) or Lucy Audrin (Piano): Mozart's Sonata no 16; and Mark’s outro music by Riffclown.
    SOFTWARE: Thanks to Sam Cappleman-Lynes and Sven Neumann
    Logo: Melvyn Mainini
    Opening Credits: Joel Blundell
    ▶ABOUT US◀
    Hi! We're Simon Anthony and Mark Goodliffe, two of the UK's most enthusiastic puzzle solvers. We have both represented the UK at the World Sudoku Championships and the World Puzzle Championships. We're also "cryptic crossword" aficionados. Mark is the twelve-time winner of The Times crossword championship and twice Senior World Champion in Sudoku, and Simon is the former record holder for most consecutive correct solutions to The Listener crossword. We hope we can help your puzzle solving while also introducing you to some of the world's best puzzles.
    Thank you for watching!
    Simon and Mark
    ▶ Contents ◀
    0:00 Theme Music & News around the channel
    4:28 Rules of today’s puzzle
    6:00 Start Of Solve - Let's Get Cracking!
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Komentáře • 52

  • @brennan985
    @brennan985 Před 18 dny +36

    Excited for another feature! That's exactly where the name came from; i was imagining Dick van Dyke with all the contraptions, legs kicking and all.

    • @MMN-pt8il
      @MMN-pt8il Před 17 dny +1

      I'd like to solve sudokus involving this constraint, but your puzzles are too hard.

  • @MattYDdraig
    @MattYDdraig Před 16 dny

    44:59
    Simply brilliant. I love the puzzles with the variable cell values (hot/cold/doublers, etc) and this was a particularly fine example.

  • @meamemg
    @meamemg Před 17 dny +3

    Took 2.5 hours, and needed to use the answer checker a few times along the way, but got it done without using the video! One of the longest solves I’ve managed to work through.

  • @angec9908
    @angec9908 Před 18 dny +15

    I think this is the first time I yelled at Mark. Trying to get him to see the 5 in box 5 to resolve the line below it 😂

    • @MegaEriadorIII
      @MegaEriadorIII Před 17 dny

      I was coming to post this myself.

    • @jdyerjdyer
      @jdyerjdyer Před 16 dny +1

      Also, there were several points where he would struggle that I had used the fact that the 1-5 cold digits were already isolated to their particular regions to quickly rule out cells from being cold and either eliminating possible values from those cells, or identifying the cold cell in a column/row/box more easily.
      All that said, he is still twice as fast as I was when you factor in all my restarts. At least each time I restarted, I was able to get to a central point much quicker because I was seeing what was flawed logic and what was infallible logic in my solve. Still hurt my head on this one. lol

  • @srwapo
    @srwapo Před 18 dny +9

    @16:35, "Yeah, this isn't bad."
    *looks at the hour left in the video length*

    • @minamagdy4126
      @minamagdy4126 Před 18 dny +1

      Spoiler (to the puzzle. I haven't watched the whole video yet):
      I'm sure Mark's agonizingly long solve comes purely from how often he missed the 5 in column 6, and its implications on the rest of the solve.
      EDIT: of course I comment that less than a minute before watching Mark find what I mentioned.

    • @srwapo
      @srwapo Před 18 dny

      @1:05:31, could have gotten that a LONG time ago. You had the 8 in Box 1 marked as a possible cold digit. The only other ones that were possible are the 12345 in Row 1 of Box 1, but you already have 12345 as cold digits from, like, the start of the puzzle. So, the 8 is cold.
      In box 4, that rules out r4r5c2 from being able to be cold. r4c1 is a 2 or 3, which, again, can't be cold. Thus, the 6 is the only available option.

    • @minamagdy4126
      @minamagdy4126 Před 18 dny

      @@srwapo How about 6?
      After thinking, you are right if you include that the cold digit in box 2 has to be 6.

    • @srwapo
      @srwapo Před 18 dny

      ​@@minamagdy4126Ah, good point. The 6 can also be the cold number. But that's still in column 2 of box 1, which puts the cold number in column 1 of box 4 and it still can't be the 23 in r4c1, but which still makes it the 6 in r5c1.

  • @richardfarrer5616
    @richardfarrer5616 Před 17 dny +1

    This flowed pretty well at the beginning. Shaping up for a comfortable sub-hour time. Then I decided to make the 6 the red cell in box 1, even though I knew it wasn't, and reached a contradiction. Spent nearly half an hour rewinding almost to the beginning.
    Eventually 1:22.

  • @emilywilliams3237
    @emilywilliams3237 Před 17 dny +1

    I really loved this video, you had my attention from start to end. I marvel at how you can keep things in your head, Mark. You are brilliant, and also fun, and funny (especially when you laugh at yourself).

  • @RichSmith77
    @RichSmith77 Před 17 dny +1

    I think I did the last half of this puzzle three times, each time finding a slightly better logical path (less bifurcatory).
    I think the key steps, for my 'better’ final solve, involved asking where the high digit was in r7. It couldn't be one of the high digits in the top of box 9, as we knew which boxes the hot 56789 already appeared in. So there had to be a hot 6 in r7c4.
    Then it was asking which boxes the cold 8 and cold 9 go in. For various reasons, I could rule out both from going in box 9. Which left cold 9 going in box 3 and cold 8 going in box 1.
    However, feeling happy with my solve, I then watched Mark's solve and realised I'd completely ignored the possibility of a cold 9 + hot 1 to make 10 in box 3! I'd only seen cold 9 + regular 2 as an option. So I had to pause the video and solve the ending for a fourth time. 😂

  • @Petrus74-yj4kv
    @Petrus74-yj4kv Před 17 dny +2

    Hot 6 was waiting for half an hour to be finally placed...

    • @RichSmith77
      @RichSmith77 Před 17 dny +1

      Yes!
      I was willing him to ask what the hot digit in row 7 could be. He knew the boxes the hot 56789 digits appeared in, and they weren't box 9, so there was no hot digit in row 7 in box 9.

  • @chocolateboy300
    @chocolateboy300 Před 17 dny

    I finished in 87 minutes. This one was really fun to do in my head, trying to calculate both the hot and cold numbers simultaneously. Interestingly, the cold digits represented the low digits in the beginning while the hot digits represented the high digits. How thematic! Great Puzzle!

  • @thumper8684
    @thumper8684 Před 18 dny +2

    I beat Mark! Solved in 61:14. Just to be fair, I always talk to myself when I am solving a puzzle.

  • @biaberg3448
    @biaberg3448 Před 17 dny

    Well done Mark! You are incredibly smart, that’s the truth, just realize it! 😊

  • @futurefox128
    @futurefox128 Před 18 dny +1

    Normally not a huge fan of doublers or modifyers like these, but this time this hot n cold stuff was more enjoyable than I thought. :)

  • @ericpraline1302
    @ericpraline1302 Před 17 dny

    I like these modifier puzzles and usually get on pretty well with them, and this was no exception. Thanks.

  • @anaayoung9142
    @anaayoung9142 Před 17 dny

    Nice one, after I did a lot of things I was a bit lost, your help at row 9, about the quadruple, helped me, do I could finish the puzzle!
    I am very happy to be able to finish this one, a Mark puzzle that have more than 1 hour!! 🎉🎉

  • @Paolo_De_Leva
    @Paolo_De_Leva Před 17 dny

    Beautiful. Modifiers are always interesting.

  • @przemekmajewski1
    @przemekmajewski1 Před 14 dny

    Superb puzzle which I also managed to solve within 1 mark, which makes me very happy

  • @boskidialer
    @boskidialer Před 18 dny +3

    1:04:25, r2c2 there was "6" placed that is not hot. There was still no cold 6 found, what was the reason to color it green? "8" in r3c2 was not yet decided to be cold for sure.

    • @rubbish8522
      @rubbish8522 Před 18 dny +2

      You are right. But it can be disproved easily. If r2c2 was a cold 6, then the cold digit in box 4 would be forced to be 2,3 or 6, all of which where already used.

  • @Rach881101
    @Rach881101 Před 17 dny +1

    53:59 for me. Nice puzzle!

  • @awilliams1701
    @awilliams1701 Před 17 dny

    OMG!!! Sudoku is your friend mark!!! AHHHH!!!!

  • @piarittersporn
    @piarittersporn Před 17 dny

    Wonderful and very exciting puzzle.

  • @ewenfraser883
    @ewenfraser883 Před 16 dny

    In box 5 I resolved the 7 first and then the 6 and 5 , unlike Mark, so clearly I wasn’t the only person “screaming at him” about the hot 6 in box 8

  • @Gonzalo_Garcia_
    @Gonzalo_Garcia_ Před 18 dny +1

    21:09 for me. Fantastic puzzle!!

  • @LednacekZ
    @LednacekZ Před 18 dny +1

    38:53 today. happy to have solved it at all. i struggled a lot.

  • @frankjiang1857
    @frankjiang1857 Před 18 dny

    Finished in 47:51. I think I'm starting to get the hang of the hot/cold squares and how to approach it. I still made a couple of bad assumptions early on, but this time I caught them early and was able to proceed fairly smoothly in the solve of this sudoku.
    Fun puzzle!

  • @Roblilley999
    @Roblilley999 Před 18 dny +1

    59:34 for me, not too bad, enjoyed this

  • @TheClawNinja
    @TheClawNinja Před 17 dny

    Wondering why David Gilmour is on the thumbnail...Gonna watch the video now.

  • @RecreationalCynic
    @RecreationalCynic Před 18 dny

    112:12 for me. I usually struggle with hot-cold cells because there are two colors to manage and they work independently of each other, but I figured out a system that works for me: give every cell red and blue to indicate where the hot and cold cells *could* be, then remove the red and blue from rows, columns, and boxes when definite hot and cold cells are located. Cells with both red and blue have the possibility of being either hot or cold, and are otherwise undetermined. Cells with no color are normal cells with no thermal modulation applied to them. If multiple cells in a row, column, or box are red or blue, those cells are the only cells in that grouping that could be hot or cold, which you can do sudoku on. For clarity I use two shades of red and blue: light red and blue for possible locations (pencilmarks), and dark red and blue for definite hot and cold cells.

  • @ewenfraser883
    @ewenfraser883 Před 16 dny

    I wonder if Mark watched this back and screamed at himself 🤣

  • @jdyerjdyer
    @jdyerjdyer Před 16 dny

    This one hurt my head and I had to start over around five times, but I solved it in the end without any cheating. Just had to be very careful not to make false assumptions. Also had to not eliminate digits that you normally could eliminate without the hot/cold rule, which was what really kept biting me and forcing my restarts. Final run, even with taking it very slow and careful I reached one point where I thought I had made a mistake, but luckily there was still a way to make the math on a particular line work out. Even after all that, I wound up with a 12 x-wing that I thought, that doesn't work, but then I remembered that I already had a hot cell in one of the columns resolving the final bit. Fun, but I need an aspirin, now. lol

  • @theredstoneengineer6934
    @theredstoneengineer6934 Před 18 dny +1

    40:23 for me

  • @jinkela7295
    @jinkela7295 Před 17 dny

    The cold cell in col 1 can only be placed in r5c1, so 6 can be placed in r9c7 and then r9c7 is a genuine cell, which places 6 in r7c4 (and it's a hot cell), and when the 4 in col 7 is placed, r12c7 can't be 45 pair anymore, so 5 in col 7 is placed in r7c7, which means the white dot is not necessary to make the puzzle's solution unique.

  • @H0lyMoley
    @H0lyMoley Před 17 dny

    One hundred and eighty three looooong minutes. Man, I persevered with this one despite not being at all good at these puzzles yet... This has to at least be a 4 difficulty, right?

  • @phuybrechts6875
    @phuybrechts6875 Před 17 dny

    White dot in box 9 never could be hot or could after a while

  • @vulkandrache1928
    @vulkandrache1928 Před 17 dny

    I am malding because of the five.

  • @MMN-pt8il
    @MMN-pt8il Před 17 dny

    Bobbins, this was hard to me. I usually try to solve sudokus before I watch these videos, so that I don't have to yell Mark and Simon where to put some digits. But I have to admit that I'm not better than them at solving puzzles.

  • @inspiringsand123
    @inspiringsand123 Před 18 dny +1

    Rules: 04:39
    Let's Get Cracking: 06:00
    What about this video's Top Tier Simarkisms?!
    Three In the Corner: 2x (1:11:32)
    The Secret: 1x (12:40)
    And how about this video's Simarkisms?!
    Ah: 10x (09:25, 11:38, 31:11, 37:07, 37:23, 46:17, 50:50, 58:43, 1:04:41, 1:10:04)
    In Fact: 9x (10:36, 13:35, 19:50, 44:02, 57:46, 1:04:45, 1:07:58, 1:09:33, 1:09:40)
    Hang On: 8x (16:57, 32:08, 1:00:12, 1:03:34, 1:03:34, 1:03:34, 1:03:34, 1:06:36)
    Brilliant: 7x (01:38, 02:08, 03:06, 04:29, 30:42, 35:29, 1:11:52)
    Pencil Mark/mark: 7x (23:21, 25:43, 25:59, 29:33, 31:38, 35:29, 1:00:04)
    By Sudoku: 6x (11:25, 15:16, 15:26, 30:03, 34:13, 40:43)
    Sorry: 4x (09:02, 12:11, 23:41, 1:00:04)
    Bother: 4x (29:42, 37:41, 38:28, 1:04:45)
    Snake: 4x (02:35, 02:39, 02:47, 02:54)
    Wow: 4x (47:14, 1:03:46, 1:05:46, 1:08:33)
    Weird: 4x (11:25, 11:58, 21:48, 43:12)
    Deadly Pattern: 3x (1:05:49, 1:06:02, 1:06:44)
    Astonishing: 2x (12:09, 12:11)
    Obviously: 2x (05:39, 06:50)
    Progress: 2x (16:21, 33:53)
    Useless: 1x (1:01:03)
    Goodness: 1x (00:16)
    Clever: 1x (1:11:43)
    In the Spotlight: 1x (1:11:38)
    Stuck: 1x (38:28)
    Fascinating: 1x (00:20)
    Extraordinary: 1x (02:52)
    Shouting: 1x (01:36)
    Irritating: 1x (38:23)
    Proliferation: 1x (02:04)
    I've Got It!: 1x (29:33)
    Intriguing: 1x (58:28)
    Most popular number(>9), digit and colour this video:
    Ten (31 mentions)
    One (163 mentions)
    White (12 mentions)
    Antithesis Battles:
    Low (11) - High (7)
    Even (13) - Odd (5)
    Lower (3) - Higher (1)
    White (12) - Black (0)
    Row (29) - Column (19)
    FAQ:
    Q1: You missed something!
    A1: That could very well be the case! Human speech can be hard to understand for computers like me! Point out the ones that I missed and maybe I'll learn!
    Q2: Can you do this for another channel?
    A2: I've been thinking about that and wrote some code to make that possible. Let me know which channel you think would be a good fit!

  • @thebitterfig9903
    @thebitterfig9903 Před 17 dny +2

    The 5 remaining in the pencil marks in column 6 box 8 for so long caused at least a little yelling at the screen.

  • @jinkela7295
    @jinkela7295 Před 17 dny

    20:33 and they don't use 5 either by sudoku

    • @jinkela7295
      @jinkela7295 Před 17 dny

      also 21:40 the hot cell in column 3 has been placed...

  • @ewenfraser883
    @ewenfraser883 Před 16 dny

    So much screaming at Mark about not making use of his discoveries ( how many times did he say hot 5 is in box 6 but not marking it in the only row possible?) how many times did he say all the cold 12345 are located before making the cells in C3 and R9 box9 green? Different brains

  • @helpeytb
    @helpeytb Před 17 dny

    Do you want to play my sudoku game?