Learn the x-wing strategy for solving sudoku puzzles, with easy solving hints and help on how to get sudoku answers, in this free math game strategy video. Expert: Stephen Kennedy Bio: Stephen Kennedy holds a major in Business Economics from Brock University. He has been solving Sudoku puzzles & teaching others how to play for 3 years. Filmmaker: Melissa Schenk
fuck!!! if this is a six! this one on the other board is a 10!
Holy shit!!!!
People,never make a vid with your mind,because he is actually thinking and no explaining
Ive never written a coment. Ever! But you are so bad at explaining things I was compelled to write my first one here. So let me tell you in terms you might understand. “There is too much entropy in the information displayed here.” In other words, “you s*ck!!!!!”
I followed that because I’m already familiar with X-Wing. If I wasn’t, I wouldn’t have been able to follow what he said. He left some important information out or glossed over it.
Nice expert village has amatuers or rookies giving fail tips
@themattyj94 They don’t have to be that many squares apart though – the important thing is that there are 4 squares – 2 in each of 2 columns and rows, thus forming the 4 corners of a square or rectangle themselves. If one value of an X-Wing is solved, the square diagonally across from it in the rectangle can be filled with the same value.
@themattyj94 The 4 squares involved will be in the same two rows and columns, so yes, they will form a square themselves. If a certain candidate is only found in two possible squares in a row, and a different row of the puzzle has the same candidate in exactly the same two columns, and only those two, they form a square, and the candidate in question can be removed from all other squares in those two columns. The reverse logic also applies – interchange the words “column” and “row” above.
esy just download google goggleson your android phone and revelve it in seconds
The numbers on your board are not visible. Your presentation looks interesting but i can’t follow you because I can’t see the numbers!
Clever! …simple yet clearly articulated
…dare I say …many of these comments are rather oddly oriented considering the fact that you are sharing freely your understand of helpful hints for playing a GAME
thanks for making the effort to share
Respect!
Do the empty squares have been to be positioned as a square, and do they have to be that many squares apart?
yap makes perfect sense when you already understand it
This guy gives me a headache…WTF man…
@gerrycorreoo its expert village…they are good at being bad
ahhhhh, alright *:-(???*
my method of solving soodookoo puzzles is easy, first i slaughter a male goat. then i drain the blood from testicles onto the puzzle and the numbers fill in automagically.
I know how to do an x-wing, it is probably the easiest sudoku move to understand. This is a very poor explanation.
You talk too much..
if this is a 6 then this is a 6 and then the other one, is a 6 also so you have this one over here which is a 6 which means this is a 6 too so practically this is a 6 as well, thus this one over here is a 6 and then 6 MY ASS MOTHERFUCKER
Also see Pleuroku (Sudoku + Minesweeper) – Free through the “Excel Blackbelts” group on LinkedIn
@FelixFelisis lol
I like the way he says “sudookoo”. so the 6 goes here and then the 6 goes there but then if you look back at the first 6 you’ll see that the 6 actually goes over to the 6 and then 6 to the 6 in these 6′s all cancel out the rest of the 6′s 6′s, therefore they all must be 6′s unless there happens to be another 6 there so then we can’t use the 6 because there’s already several 6′s here and there, including that one by the 6 thats in my cool hairdo.
Maybe if you played sudoku you would understand what he’s saying. It made sense to me.
pathetic explanation
i dun understand anything this freak is saying