Skip to main content

← Back to strategy guide

Common Mistakes and How to Fix Them

Most stalls come from execution mistakes, not missing advanced techniques. Fix the basics first.

Checklist

  1. Keep a clear reason for each elimination.
  2. Update linked units after every placement.
  3. Avoid mixing note mode and value mode unintentionally.
  4. Use a fixed scan order to reduce blind spots.

Place in the Learning Course

Treat this page as a lesson, not only a reference. Check the condition, solve one matching puzzle, then review which candidate or cell made the step valid.

1. Find it

Run the checklist in order until you can explain the pattern.

2. Verify it

Compare the valid and invalid diagrams before removing candidates.

3. Practice it

Open the linked difficulty archive and look for the same condition.

Valid pattern: disciplined candidate handling

With reasoned eliminations and fixed update order, the board stays consistent and recoverable.

Valid Diagram (9x9)
Keep Remove Focus Given Rows A-I / Columns 1-9

Stable candidate flow with explicit logic.

Invalid pattern: speculative elimination

One unjustified deletion can propagate contradictions deep into the solve.

Invalid Diagram (9x9)
Keep Remove Focus Given Rows A-I / Columns 1-9

Inconsistent eliminations leading to contradiction.

Avoid applying it too early

Use this technique only when every checklist condition is true. A board can look similar while still missing one required limit, and removing a candidate too early can break the puzzle later. Before you act, say which unit, which digit, and which cells make the move valid.

  • Fix the row, column, or box you are reasoning about before removing candidates.
  • Separate candidates that can be removed from candidates that must remain.
  • After the removal, rescan for naked singles or hidden singles created by the update.

How to test it in a real puzzle

After reading the article, do not immediately jump to a harder level. Open one linked difficulty archive and look for the same condition while the checklist is still visible. If the pattern does not appear, that is still useful: write down which row, column, box, digit, or candidate set you checked. That note makes the next related technique easier to choose.

Where to use this

Applies to all levels; especially helpful at Medium and above.

Read next

After-Puzzle Review

  • Write down one cell or candidate affected by this technique.
  • Check whether you almost removed a candidate without the full condition.
  • Choose whether to solve one more puzzle at this level or read the related technique first.