Logic Grid

00:00
Clues
  1. Alice is a doctor who vacations at the beach.
  2. The pilot goes on cruises.
  3. Carol is a teacher.
  4. The person with a cat listens to jazz.
  5. Dan is a writer who stays in a cabin.
  6. Eve has a rabbit.
  7. The teacher goes to the mountains.
  8. Bob has a parrot.
  9. The person who goes to the city listens to pop.
  10. The dog owner listens to classical music.
  11. Carol has a dog.
  12. Dan has a fish.
  13. Alice has a cat.
Person
Alice
Bob
Carol
Dan
Eve
Career
Doctor
Lawyer
Teacher
Pilot
Writer
Vacation
Beach
Mountains
City
Cruise
Cabin
Pet
Cat
Dog
Rabbit
Fish
Parrot
Music
Rock
Jazz
Classical
Pop
Blues

How to Play

Match items across categories using the clues.

👆

Click a cell once to mark a match (✓). Click again for an elimination (✗). Click once more to clear.

When you place a ✓, the grid auto-eliminates the rest of that row and column and propagates matches across sub-grids.

📋

Read all clues before marking. Some are direct ("Alice = Red"), others are conditional ("The tea drinker plays soccer").

🔗

Cross-reference: if Alice = Red and Red = Cat, then Alice = Cat. Chain facts across grids.

🏆

Fill every sub-grid correctly to win. Use hints if you're stuck (up to 3).

Keyboard shortcuts
Undo
Ctrl+Z
Redo
Ctrl+Y

Reveal Solution?

This will show the complete solution. The puzzle will be marked as "solved with reveal" rather than self-solved.

About expert logic grids

Five categories, five items each, ten sub-grids. The triangle of grids is now substantial, and every technique in the strategy guide comes into play. Direct assignments, cascading eliminations, multi-grid cross-referencing, conditional chains three or four links long, and careful tracking of what you've checked versus what you haven't.

The main challenge is grid management. With ten sub-grids, it's easy to make a mark in one corner and forget to check the ripple effects three sub-grids away. A disciplined approach: every time you place a checkmark, immediately check all sub-grids that share a category with that match. The auto-elimination handles the immediate row/column, but cross-grid propagation is partly on you.

Expert puzzles have 12–15 clues, which sounds like a lot, but spread across 250 cells in 10 sub-grids, each clue carries real weight. Missing one implication from a single clue can stall the entire puzzle. Re-read the clue list every time you feel stuck.

For the ultimate challenge, try Einstein — same grid dimensions, but with deliberately fewer clues. Every fact has to work harder.