Sudoku Puzzles, which are also popularly known as the Number Place, was originally a game puzzle published for a newspaper in France. The year 1895 saw the birth of the said puzzle game. The Number Place puzzle was subsequently revived during the mid-80s in Japan and was later known as the Sudoku Puzzles. It started to gain its popularity among the international community during 2005.
During the revival of what was originally the Number Place puzzle in Japan, publishers abbreviated the phrase suuji wa dokushin ni kagiru, which literally meant the digits must remain single, and came up with the more popular name, Sudoku Puzzles.
The Sudoku Puzzles, unlike others, have a very easy instruction to follow. Although numbers have been conventionally used as the symbol or character for the puzzle, some of its variations substitute the numbers with letters, geometric figures, and others. Another version of the puzzle even used the positions in a baseball game to replace the numbers between one and nine. The characters used are actually irrelevant to the objective of the game itself.
The logic of the Sudoku puzzles is very simple. A grid with a dimension that is...