I’ve been looking into Lohkous lately, one of Hempuli’s many genres. While it has the potential for some extremely cursed puzzles, it also has a lot of depth for interesting logic. Here’s a small puzzle I’m quite fond of.
Okay fine, here’s a normal Remembered Length puzzle. It is, however, quite a hard puzzle. You might have to reach pretty deep into your loop theory toolbox to solve this without bashing.
This is the second of two weird Remembered Length puzzles I made. I recommend solving the other one first.
After sharing yesterday’s Forgetful Loop, I was made aware of Remembered Length. It looks like a really cool genre, so I tried making some puzzles in it. Unfortunately, I seem to be incapable of making a normal puzzle in an existing genre, so I made two gimmicky ones.
The Forgetful variant I’ve used with Double Back and Rail Pool is really interesting, and it occurred to me that it would probably make a decent genre on its own.
Let’s wrap up this initial batch of Ivy puzzles with a tough one to explore the other end of the available range of difficulties and deductions. There is no bashing required to solve this.
I’m often drawn to experimenting with genres on other grids, and the triangular grid actually turns out to be a great fit for Ivy, both in terms of logic and aesthetics. In another universe, where the genre didn’t originate with Corey’s prompt, this might have been the default grid for the genre.
This one is a little gimmicky and doesn’t have the most interesting solution, but I felt that I needed to try making at least one these. I’ve tried to make a more interesting version of this a couple times, but it always ended up being more of the same.
This was the first Ivy puzzle I made. In terms of difficulty, I think it’s also a good introduction to the genre, but you’ll find that the solution has a property that makes it not ideal as an example puzzle.
Another original genre! I have a backlog of genre ideas involving branching lines that I want to explore at some point, but this new idea came up and I was sufficiently excited about it to let it skip the queue. Here’s an introductory puzzle to get you started.