The History of Sudoku

Although the name Sudoku is a Japanese acronym, the puzzle was invented in the United States. It was anonymously designed by Howard Garns, a retired architect who after specializing in the construction of buildings, concentrated on the construction of puzzles. Dell Magazines first published the puzzle under the name Number Place in 1979.

Despite the Japanese acronym, Sudoku originated from the United States. First published under the name "Number Place" by Dell Magazines in 1979, the puzzle was anonymously designed by Howard Garns, a retired architect. However, it was in Japan that the puzzle gained popularity. First introduced to the Japanese market in April of 1984, under the name Suuhi wa dokushin ni kagiru , which is translated as "the numbers must be single,". The puzzle's popularity rapidly increased, it soon became shortened to and known as "Sudoku".

In April 1984, The Monthly Nikolist introduced the puzzle to Japan under the name Suuji wa dokushin ni kagiru which means, "The numbers must be single".  In other words, each number must appear once and only once in a row, column or region. The puzzle was named by Maki Kaji, the president of Nikoli, with the catchy acronym of Sudoku.  As its popularity increased in Japan, it evolved into its present form under different titles in mainstream Japanese periodicals.
In 1989, Loadstar/Softdisk Publishing published DigitHunt on the Commodore 64, apparently the first home computer version of Sudoku. Later, in 1996, Yoshimitsu Kanai published his version of the computerized puzzle under the name Single Number for the Apple Macintosh in Japanese and English, for the Palm PDA and for the Mac OS-X in 2005.
After seeing the Sudoku puzzle in a Japanese publication, Wayne Gould, a retired Hong Kong judge, originally of New Zealand, worked six years to convert the paper version into a computerized version that would write the puzzles instantaneously. Because the British press has a long, successful history of publishing crossword puzzles, Mr. Gould promoted Sudoku to the Times in London. Its daily publication continued to increase in popularity until other publications in the UK picked up on it. The Daily Telegraph introduced the puzzle on a daily basis on Feb. 23, 2005 with full front-page treatment. The sales of the newspaper increased dramatically due to the readership playing Sudoku. The rapid rise of newspaper circulation in Great Britain attributed to the popularity of the Sudoku puzzle sparked the interest of other media. On July 1, 2005, the TV audience saw the first live TV Sudoku game program SKY ONE. By September 2005, it spread throughout the European Common Market.
The sudoko craze hit the United States during the second half of 2005; newspapers picked up the puzzle. CBS Broadcasting aired several TV shows on Sudoku. It has come full circle, back home to its birthplace in the USA, as it spreads like wildfire in Europe. Sadly, Howard Garns, the inventor of the original puzzle, did not live to see its universal popularity. Sudoku is expected to continue to spread worldwide thanks to the combination of its irresistible mind challenging principal, its use of the universal language of Aramaic numbers and the state-of-the-art instantaneous global communication. Sudoku is here to stay; proof that the world population still loves a good puzzle!



The SuDoKu Cube was invented by Jay Horowitz on March 16, 2006

The SuDoKu Slide was invented by Jay Horowitz on June 28, 2006

The SuDoKu Solitaire was invented by Jay Horowitz on January 16, 2007

 

             

 

The History of Kakuro

The first type of these puzzles, originally named Cross Sums, were published in 1996 by Dell Magazines, the same American Publication which introduced Sudoku Puzzles under the name of Number Place to the world (Galanti).
Six years after their initial release in Japan, Nikoli re-branded "Kasan Kurosu" as Kakuro (Galanti).

 

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Page updated 29 October 2008