Araf by Serkan Yürekli

Araf by Serkan Yürekli

PDF

or solve online (using our beta test of Penpa-Edit tools; use tab to alternate between a composite mode for line/edge drawing and a shading mode.)

Theme: Clue Symmetry

Author/Opus: This is the 27th puzzle from our contributing puzzlemaster Serkan Yürekli.

Rules: Divide the grid into some regions formed of edge-adjacent squares. Each cell is part of one region, and each region should contain exactly two given numbers. Each region must have an area that is strictly between those numbers (This means, for two number clues A and B with A < B, the area C fulfills A < C < B).

Araf Example

Answer String: Enter the number of cells in each connected group (between bold lines) in the marked rows. For the example above, this is “34,121111,4111”.

Time Standards (highlight to view): Grandmaster = 4:00, Master = 6:15, Expert = 12:30

Solution: PDF

  • chaotic_iak says:

    07:09.

    Every step of this puzzle is amazing. The opening begins with a wonderful distant connections that forces most of the puzzle, and the ending is beautiful extremities play. Great puzzle.

  • Aaron Chan says:

    Very interesting Araf. I don’t think I have seen one that opens or ends like this before.

  • Nikolai says:

    Marvelous puzzle, a delightful solve. Thanks 🙂

  • Scott Handelman says:

    I was very scared of this puzzle when it was announced, because it feels a bit reminiscent of Numberlink, which requires as much intuition as it does logic. But this was a very doable, enjoyable puzzle.

  • hagriddler says:

    Just to make sure, I guess “Each region must have an area that is strictly between those numbers” means that the number of squares in a region must be between the two givens but not equal to those numbers.
    So an region containing the numbers 1 and 4 must contain 2 or 3 squares.

    In other words : b is STRICTLY between a and c means a < b < c (or c < b < a) where b is between a and c could be a <= b <= c (or c <= b <= a).

    Do I understand this correctly ?

  • Carl W says:

    I absolutely loved the forcing logic of this puzzle. It was
    such a pleasure to watch the solution unfold. Thanks for the fun.

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