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Gattai-3
Gattai-3 is a multi-sudoku. This means: The puzzle does not consist of a single classic Sudoku, but of multiple interconnected 9x9 Sudokus. Each sub-sudoku follows the standard Sudoku rules: Each row, column, and 3x3 box must contain the numbers 1 to 9 exactly once.
Gattai-3 is a merged arrangement of three classic 9x9 Sudokus. The sub-Sudokus are not simply next to each other but form a common shape with overlapping areas.
Gattai-3 relies on switching between the three sub-Sudokus and using shared areas consistently as connection points. Like all Sudokus, there is no calculation involved. The numbers are symbols placed correctly through logical elimination.
Basic Rules
- The puzzle consists of several classic 9x9 Sudokus connected into a common shape.
- Exactly one number from 1 to 9 is written in each active cell.
- Within each individual 9x9 Sudoku, each row must contain the numbers 1 to 9 exactly once.
- Within each individual 9x9 Sudoku, each column must contain the numbers 1 to 9 exactly once.
- Within each 9x9 Sudoku, each 3x3 block must contain the numbers 1 to 9 exactly once.
- Shared cells belong to multiple sub-Sudokus. The value entered there must be the same for all involved sub-Sudokus.
- Pre-given numbers must not be changed.
- Unseen areas outside the visible grid do not belong to the puzzle and are not filled in.
- A multi-sudoku is solved when all contained 9x9 Sudokus are correctly solved and all shared cells match.
- Important: A long visible row is not automatically a Sudoku row. Always consider the boundaries of the 9x9 sub-sudoku being viewed.
Solving Strategies
The basic techniques correspond to classic Sudoku. The difference is that certain entries in one sub-sudoku can influence others, especially in shared cells and overlapping areas.
1. Check a single sub-sudoku as a normal Sudoku
Start with a sub-sudoku where many numbers are already given. Often, simple safe entries can be found there without considering the entire multi-sudoku form at once.

In the considered 9x9 part-sudoku, a row reads 43172689. The numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, and 9 are already present. The only missing number is 5. Therefore, the last open cell of this part-sudoku row must be a 5.

This conclusion applies only to the nine cells of this specific part-sudoku row, not the entire visible width of the shape.
2. Hidden single candidate in a 3x3 block
Not every safe number results from an almost complete row. Often, a number can only go in one position within a 3x3 block. In the following complete Gattai-3 grid, we look at the top-left 3x3 block of a sub-sudoku to find the number 5.

In the examined sub-sudoku, the 5 is checked in the top-left 3x3 block. The second and third rows already contain a 5, so it cannot be in those rows within that block. Additionally, the first and second columns of this sub-sudoku already contain a 5. This excludes the first two cells in the first row of the block, leaving only the third cell. That cell must contain the 5.

This is a hidden single candidate. The cell may not seem immediately obvious, but for the number 5, only this position within the block is allowed.
3. Use a shared cell as a bridge
Shared cells are the most important feature of Gattai-3. A shared cell belongs to multiple sub-Sudokus. When a number is confidently determined there, it must be immediately reflected in all involved sub-Sudokus.

In the left 9-row of the example, the sequence 123456.78 is present. The only remaining number in this sub-sudoku is 9. The open cell also lies in the neighboring sub-sudoku. Once 9 is entered, it also affects the 9 in that adjacent sub-sudoku's line.

This first entry is therefore not just a local progress step but also an indication for the neighboring sub-sudoku, as the same cell belongs to a line, column, and 3x3 block in that area as well.
4. Overlap leads to a follow-up step
The relevant 9-line in the neighboring sub-sudoku is 45697812. Only the 3 is missing, so this cell can also be confidently filled.

This example shows the typical multi-sudoku effect: First, a cell is confidently solved in one sub-sudoku. Because this cell is shared, it immediately causes a further confident deduction in the adjacent sub-sudoku.
5. Check candidates in overlaps rigorously
A normal Sudoku cell is restricted by a row, column, and 3x3 block. A shared cell may also belong to additional rows, columns, and blocks of other sub-sudokus. Therefore, a candidate in a shared cell is only valid if it is allowed in all involved sub-Sudokus.
Practically, this means: do not evaluate a shared cell only from the perspective of the sub-Sudoku you're working on. Switch deliberately to the other sub-sudoku and check its row, column, and block as well. This often helps to identify shared cells as border cells earlier.
6. Carefully track the boundaries of sub-Sudokus
While Gattai-3 looks like a large connected puzzle, its logic stems from the individual 9x9 Sudokus. A visible row may contain multiple different sub-sudoku rows. Always clearly specify which 9x9 sub-sudoku is being considered.
Typical solving process
- First, get an overview of the arrangement: three merged 9x9 Sudokus.
- Select a sub-sudoku with many clues and find safe classical Sudoku steps.
- Check nearly complete rows, columns, and 3x3 blocks.
- Search for hidden single candidates: numbers that can only go in one position within a region.
- Mentally mark shared cells and overlapping areas.
- Immediately transfer each certain entry in a shared cell to all involved sub-sudokus.
- Afterwards, verify whether new candidates or eliminations arise in neighboring sub-sudokus.
- Regularly switch between the sub-sudokus instead of solving a region in isolation.
- At each entry, verify that it is allowed in all affected rows, columns, and 3x3 blocks.
- Stop when every single 9x9 Sudoku is fully and consistently solved.
Common mistakes
- Treating the entire shape as a single large Sudoku. But rules apply within each individual 9x9 Sudoku.
- Updating shared cells in only one sub-Sudoku. A shared cell always affects all sub-sudokus it belongs to.
- Falsely tracking boundaries. Not every visible row is part of the same Sudoku row in offset grids.
- Interpreting areas without grids as cells. Areas without a grid are not filled in.
- Relying on guessing too early. A wrong entry can damage multiple sub-sudokus simultaneously.
- Not checking candidates in overlaps carefully enough. A candidate must be allowed in all involved rows, columns, and blocks.
- Not proceeding after a safe entry. Shared cells often lead to immediate new eliminations.
Tips for beginners
- Start with a single sub-sudoku and only make safe moves.
- Early on, look for shared areas. These often form the most important connections.
- Strictly observe the 9x9 boundaries of individual Sudokus.
- Always check all involved sub-sudokus for shared cells, not just the area you're working on.
- Use candidate notes as soon as multiple sub-sudokus are involved.
- Switch perspective: if a sub-sudoku cannot progress, check the neighboring shared cells.
- Ask yourself with each entry: In which sub-sudoku is this number surely? Does it also affect another sub-sudoku?
- View overlaps not just as a difficulty but as additional clues.
Gattai-3 extends the classic Sudoku without changing its fundamental logic. Each number still follows the known Sudoku rules. The challenge is to properly link several sub-sudokus. By consistently using shared cells, even complex multi-sudoku shapes can be logically solved step by step.