Hitori ひとりにしてくれ

Logic puzzle · 1990 (Nikoli) · 1 player · Variable

Hitori ("leave me alone") shades cells until each number is alone in its row and column. No two shaded cells touch; all unshaded cells form one connected region. NP-complete; the playful name is beloved in puzzle communities.

Rules

Grid has numbers with repeats. Shade cells so: no number repeats in any row or column among unshaded cells; no two shaded cells share an edge (diagonal OK); all unshaded cells form one connected region. Solve by logic; unique solution. Adjacent identical numbers: one must be shaded. Shading must not disconnect the unshaded region. The playful name ("leave me alone") refers to each number being left alone in its row and column.

History

Hitori appeared in Nikoli in March 1990. The name means "leave me alone"—each number is left alone in its row and column. NP-complete. The playful name is beloved in puzzle communities. Steady international puzzle book presence; digital apps include Simon Tatham's Portable Puzzle Collection and Nikoli puzzle apps.

Tips for beginners

Mark cells you know are unshaded (adjacent to potential shade) first. Adjacent identical numbers: one shaded, one safe. Always check that shading a cell won't disconnect the unshaded region. Use no-adjacency rule to place safe markers.

Cultural context

The playful name is beloved; NP-complete means difficulty scales sharply. Nikoli print and global digital platforms. Hitori ("leave me alone") shades cells until each number is alone in its row and column. The name refers to leaving each number alone. Available on Nikoli.com, Simon Tatham's Portable Puzzle Collection, and various logic puzzle apps. The no-adjacent-shaded and connected-unshaded rules create elegant constraint propagation.

Play online

Play at Nikoli.com, Simon Tatham's Portable Puzzle Collection (Hitori), Conceptis Puzzles, Puzzle-Nonograms.com. Mobile: various logic puzzle apps include Hitori.

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