Squid Maze Challenge
Jewel Miner Quest
Lollipop Stack Run
What Kind Of Santa Claus Are You
Astro Destroyer
Baby Piano Children Song
Miawdoku replaces digits with charming cat tokens yet keeps the elegant logic of Sudoku intact, turning every grid into a cozy deduction exercise where clarity and patience win; to play, select a difficulty and fill a 9×9 board so each row, column, and 3×3 pen holds exactly one of each cat, using pencil marks to note candidates and tapping firmly to commit when you’re sure; the teaching path is gentle: the tutorial introduces singles (a spot where only one cat can fit), hidden singles (a cat that appears only once as a candidate within a line or pen), and pairs you can track to eliminate other candidates, then expands into pointing pairs, box-line reductions, and simple chains that crack medium boards without guesswork; tips for early progress include scanning systematically left-to-right and top-to-bottom to avoid missing obvious placements, clearing a full set of pencil marks every few moves to prevent clutter, and favoring pens with the fewest blanks because they yield faster deductions; on harder boards, harness patterns: if a pen can place the orange cat in only one of two cells that share a column, you can strike orange from other cells of that column outside the pen, and if two cells in a row share exactly the same two cats, those are locked in as a pair, freeing the rest of the row from them; when stuck, don’t guess—toggle “conflict highlight” briefly to confirm candidates are legal, then switch views to rows or columns with the highest candidate counts and look for a cat that appears only twice, a common gateway to a new chain; optional hints are educational, not prescriptive—they show the technique that applies (say, a pointing pair) and let you perform it manually, which builds real skill over time; sound and visuals are friendly without distraction: soft taps for pencil marks, a purr for correct placements, and clear shapes on cat tokens so color perception isn’t required, with a high-contrast theme and adjustable grid weight to keep lines readable on small screens; daily challenges offer one curated puzzle per day for a quick brain stretch, and a sandbox lets you custom-build grids, a nice way to teach a new technique to a friend; the charm is how the theme lightens the mental workout—you get the deep “click” of a logic path resolving, wrapped in cozy art that makes lingering over a tough pen feel like time well spent, and finishing a clean board without a single contradiction is as satisfying as a tidy notebook page filled with correct answers.
Fill each 3x3 subgrid row and column with each unique cat only once Every row column and subgrid should contain all nine different cats with no repeats
So many more games you can play!
More games