- Grid: 10×10
- Filled cells (solution): 40 / 100
- Fill density: 40%
- Longest row hint run: 4
- Longest column hint run: 4
- Average hint groups: rows 2.5 • cols 2.7
Easy Nonograms have fewer ambiguous choices early. With a 10×10 grid and ~40% filled density, you’ll often start by filling guaranteed runs and clearing obvious blanks.
- Start with lines where the hint numbers almost fill the line — those produce guaranteed blocks.
- Use overlap: if a run must include the center area, fill only the cells that are always covered.
- Mark definite blanks early (X-mode) to reduce future ambiguity.
- Try today’s other difficulties: Medium · Hard
- Previous days (Easy): Thu, Jun 4 · Wed, Jun 3 · Tue, Jun 2 · Mon, Jun 1 · Sun, May 31 · Sat, May 30 · Fri, May 29
What do the numbers mean?
Each number shows a group of filled cells in that row or column. Multiple numbers mean multiple groups, separated by at least one blank cell.
Is X-mode required?
It’s optional, but it helps a lot. Marking definite blanks prevents accidental fills and makes deductions easier.
Do I need to guess?
No. These puzzles are designed to be solved logically using overlaps, spacing, and elimination.
💡 How to play: Use the numbers above and to the left of the grid to decide which cells to fill. Each number shows how many squares are filled consecutively in that row or column. Use X-mode (Ctrl + left-click or just right-click) to mark cells that must stay empty — it helps eliminate options and avoid mistakes.