How to play Meowdoku

These four rules explain every legal solution. When stuck, re-check in order: color → row/column → diagonal → forced cells.

Rule 1

One cat per color region

Each colored region must contain exactly one cat. Region sizes can differ — a single-cell color is a forced placement and should usually be handled first.

Rule 2

One cat per row and column

On an N×N board, each row and each column gets exactly one cat (N cats total). Once a cat is placed, that row and column are closed for other cats.

Rule 3

Cats cannot touch

No two cats may share an edge or a corner. Equivalently, each cat blocks all eight surrounding cells. This is one of the biggest differences from classic Sudoku.

Rule 4

Logic first, guessing last

Puzzles are built for deduction. Wrong placements cost fish tokens — mark impossibles with X instead of gambling.

Controls & interface

  • Place / remove: tap empty cells to place, tap again to remove (except locked cats).
  • X marks: switch to mark mode to note cells that cannot hold a cat.
  • Hint: spends a hint to reveal one correct cat and mark its blocked zone.
  • Undo / restart: reverse recent moves or clear the level.
  • Fish tokens: wrong placements cost lives; run out and the level fails.

Recommended beginner flow

  1. Start from locked cats; mark their row, column, and 8 neighbors.
  2. Find every single-cell color and place those forced cats.
  3. Look for rows, columns, or regions with only one legal cell left.
  4. Repeat elimination until the board converges; use a hint or a level guide if needed. Level Guides

Vs Sudoku

Sudoku uses numbers and boxes; Meowdoku uses cats and freeform color regions plus the no-touch diagonal rule. You need spatial elimination, not arithmetic. See strategy for deeper techniques. Strategy

Rules clear? Start playing

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