peek at solution solve puzzle
quality: difficulty: solvability: moderate lookahead
Puzzle Description:
Te amo! T'aime! Sukiyo! Saranghae! Doesn't matter how you say it. Love is a universal language.
#1: Bill Eisenmann (Bullet) on Jun 18, 2020
Yes it is! But I can't read this one ... :/#2: Jota (jota) on Jun 18, 2020
And again I agree with Bill!#3: Kristen Vognild (kristen) on Jun 18, 2020
Is this Korean?#4: BlackCat (BlackCat) on Jun 18, 2020
I'll have to take your word for it. Did have to guess twice to finish the puzzle.#5: JoDeen Mozena (ozymoe) on Jun 19, 2020
Had to use a little edge logic at the end. Nice.#6: Andrew Schultz (blurglecruncheon) on Jun 19, 2020
The end bit where I realized rows 8-10 had to be in columns (1 or 2) and (4 or 5) made me feel smart. A little more complex than the usual edge logic.#7: Web Paint-By-Number Robot (webpbn) on Jul 3, 2020
Found to be solvable with moderate lookahead by infrapinklizzard.#8: Joe (infrapinklizzard) on Jul 3, 2020 [HINT]
Comment Suppressed:Click below to view hints#9: Joe (infrapinklizzard) on Jul 3, 2020 [SPOILER]
Google translate got a little confused with this - it first said "Love", then "Division", "I love you", and "It's difficult". It returned to "Love" pretty often, though.#10: Scarlet Noelle Masen (scarletprincess) on Jul 21, 2020 [SPOILER]
Sounds like a normal relationship.
Joe, I would love to know what you put into google to recieve those answers. Haha. 사랑해 does in fact mean "I love you" in korean. 사랑 on its own means love.#11: Joe (infrapinklizzard) on Aug 17, 2020
The translations were from the Google Translate app, using its camera function. So it had all the grid lines and pixelation to deal with.
Show: Hints
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