Suduko has Captured the Minds of Millions!
Suduko first appeared as a game in the 18th century. It took
almost 200 years before it made it into the media.
In 1979 the first Suduko puzzle was published in an American
puzzle magazine called Dell Pencil Puzzles and Word Games where
it was called "Number Place"
Then it disappeared back into obscurity in the West,
occasionally appearing in puzzle magazines. In 1984 the Monthly
Nikolist paper in Japan published the same kind of puzzle under
the name Suduko. Other magazines picked up on this puzzle fad,
but due to copyright reasons couldn't call it Suduko.
It was in 1989 Suduko made its first migration to computers.
DigitHunt was published on the Commodore 64, bringing Suduko to
a whole new audience. In 1995 it appeared on the Apple
Macintosh, and then in 1996 on the Palm PDA.
In 1997 Wayne Gould, a retired judge from Hong Kong saw a partly
completed puzzle in a Japanese bookshop. He spent the next six
year producing a computer program to quickly produce these
puzzles.
Wayne knew that the British loved crosswords and puzzles, so he
contacted The Times newspaper in London. As he imaged, they
leapt upon the idea and on 12th November 2004 published it under
the name of Su Doku. Every issue of The Times since this date
has contained a Su Doku puzzle.
Su Doku immediately grabbed the attention of the public, and
just three days later The Daily Mail published the puzzle, but
called it "Codenumber". On January 19th 2005 The Daily Telegraph
published its Sudoku puzzle, which was quickly picked up by
other newspapers.
On May 20th 2005, Sudoku made an intercontinental leap and
appeared in The Daily Telegraph of Sydney. This massive surge of
interest has resulted in Sudoko being called "The fastest
growing puzzle in the world".
Despite being the first publishers of Su Doku, The Times were
caught napping my the Daily Telegraph. Whereas The Times hid the
puzzle in the middle of the paper, The Telegraph splashed Sudoko
over the front page, realising that it was increasing sales.
They took advantage of their market lead and published the first
Sudoku book before the other papers realised just how popular
Sudoku was.
By mid 2005, every paper in Britain contained a Sudoku puzzle
and there was no escaping. Even small local papers were getting
in on the popularity of the puzzle. The newspapers began to
compete with each other, with both The Times and Daily Mail both
claiming to be the first to feature this puzzle.
2005 was really the year that Sudoku captured the imagination of
the British people. The newspapers published more and more
Sudoku puzzles, even Teletext got in on the act. And then
finally in July 2005, the satellite channel Sky One hosted the
world's first live TV Sudoku show.
It was during the promotion of this show that Sky One built a
275 foot (84m) square puzzle on a hillside near Chipping Sodbury
near Bristol, England. It was next to the M4 motorway and was
coincided with a major road expansion which meant drivers were
going slower and could safely view the puzzle. Unfortunately for
the television show makers, the puzzle had 1,905 correct
solutions, not the usual one solution.
Sudoku, as a puzzle, has captured the minds of tens of thousands
of people. It's a puzzle that is here to stay, but be warned,
once you pick Sudoku up, you may struggle to put it down again.