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Vicky Handa
Vicky Handa

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The Day I Got Completely Hooked on Sudoku

I still remember the exact moment I realized this wasn’t “just a little puzzle.”

It was supposed to be five minutes.

That’s what I told myself.

Five minutes while waiting for a friend at a café. Five minutes to avoid scrolling social media. Five minutes to feel mildly productive.

Forty-five minutes later, my coffee was cold… and I was completely hooked.

It Started as a Time Filler

Like most people, I didn’t take Sudoku seriously at first.

It felt like something you’d see in newspapers next to crossword puzzles. A quiet, slightly nerdy pastime. Respectable, but not exciting.

So when I downloaded an app out of boredom, I expected nothing dramatic.

I chose an easy level.
Filled in a few obvious numbers.
Thought, “Okay, this is kind of nice.”

But then something interesting happened.

The Click Moment

About halfway through that first puzzle, there was a moment where everything clicked.

I had been staring at one stubborn 3x3 box. Nothing seemed obvious. I checked rows. I checked columns. Still nothing.

Then suddenly — I saw it.

One missing number.
One overlooked restriction.
One logical deduction that made everything else fall into place.

It wasn’t luck.

It was logic.

And that tiny mental spark? It felt amazing.

That’s when I understood the real appeal of Sudoku.

Why It’s So Addictive (In a Good Way)

There’s something deeply satisfying about solving a problem that has a single, clean solution.

In daily life, problems are messy.

Conversations are complicated.
Work tasks are layered.
Emotions are unpredictable.

But in Sudoku, the rules are clear.

Every number belongs somewhere.
Every placement has a reason.
Every mistake can be traced back logically.

That clarity is addictive.

Not because it’s flashy.
But because it feels fair.

The Transition From Easy to Hard

At first, I stuck to easy puzzles. They were relaxing. Predictable. Comfortable.

But after a few days, I got curious.

“What’s the difference between easy and hard anyway?”

Big mistake.

Or maybe the best decision.

The first hard puzzle humbled me instantly. I couldn’t rely on obvious placements anymore. I had to think several steps ahead. I had to consider possibilities instead of certainties.

It felt like leveling up in a video game — except the boss battle was my own brain.

And I loved it.

The Frustration Phase

Let’s be honest.

There were moments when I almost deleted the app.

Especially when I made a careless mistake and had to backtrack half the grid.

There’s nothing more painful than realizing a wrong number placed 10 minutes ago just destroyed your entire logic chain.

But here’s what surprised me:

Instead of quitting, I wanted to understand why I made the mistake.

Was I rushing?
Did I assume something without verifying?
Did I ignore a subtle detail?

Sudoku doesn’t punish you randomly.

If you fail, it’s usually because you skipped a step.

That lesson stuck with me.

Playing in Unexpected Places

Once I got hooked, I started playing everywhere.

On the train.
In waiting rooms.
Before bed.
Even during lunch breaks.

It became my go-to alternative to scrolling.

Instead of passively consuming content, I was actively solving something.

And that small shift changed how I felt afterward.

Scrolling often leaves me drained.
Solving a puzzle leaves me sharper.

That difference is huge.

The Satisfaction of a Perfect Grid

There’s a specific moment at the end of a puzzle that never gets old.

You fill in the last number.
You scan the board one final time.
Everything aligns.

No duplicates.
No gaps.
No contradictions.

Just order.

That clean, completed grid gives me a strange sense of pride. Not the loud, “I conquered the world” kind of pride.

More like quiet competence.

“I figured this out.”

And sometimes, after a long day where nothing else feels fully resolved, that small win matters.

The Surprising Emotional Side

I didn’t expect a number puzzle to teach me emotional lessons.

But it did.

Patience Beats Impulsiveness

If I rush, I make mistakes.

If I slow down and double-check, progress becomes steady.

Confidence Grows Through Practice

At the beginning, hard puzzles felt impossible.

Now, they feel challenging but manageable.

The grid didn’t change.

I did.

Progress Is Incremental

You never solve the entire puzzle at once.

You solve one cell.
Then another.
Then another.

It’s a reminder that even complex problems can be broken down.

Why It’s Not Just a Game Anymore

Some people unwind with music.
Some with TV.
Some with exercise.

For me, Sudoku has become a mental reset button.

If I’m anxious, it helps me focus.
If I’m bored, it stimulates me.
If I’m overwhelmed, it simplifies my thinking.

It’s structured.
It’s logical.
It’s calm.

And in a world that often feels chaotic, that structure feels comforting.

The Café Incident That Sealed the Deal

Remember that first day at the café?

By the time my friend arrived, I was still staring at the screen, determined to finish.

He laughed and said, “You’re really into that, huh?”

I didn’t even look up.

“Just one more number.”

That was the moment I knew.

This wasn’t just a time filler anymore.

It was something I genuinely enjoyed.

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