Daily Mail

Countdown to our cracking new puzzles!

Bigger, brighter and more addictive than ever, the Mail’s launching a new daily puzzles pullout, starting on Saturday – with £3k to be won EVERY WEEK. And who better to introduce the new games than quiz queen Carol Vorderman?

- by Christophe­r Stevens

Grab a pen, breathe deeply and get your thinking cap on. From Easter Saturday there’s a bigger, better puzzles section in your Daily Mail, with all your favourites plus some exciting new ones — promising to give your grey matter a sizzling workout.

Think you’ve cracked Sudoku? Have you mastered our addictive noughtsand-crosses puzzle Kurosu, which you can find every day on Page 2? Well, you ain’t seen nothing yet...

all this week, we’ll be introducin­g you to fascinatin­g, ingenious and tantalisin­g new braintease­rs that will test you as never before — all of which will appear in our fabulous new Puzzles & Prizes supplement, alongside your regular favourites such as Codeword and Sudoku.

We couldn’t do all this, of course, without offering bigger prizes. That’s why, from Monday, april 22, we’re giving you a chance to win £3,000 every week.

On Saturday, we’ll publish your new Puzzles & Prizes four-page pullout as a taster of what you can expect every weekday — and to celebrate its launch, there is £12,000 in prizes to be won.

Today, we introduce you to the

wonderfull­y uncomplica­ted but endlessly challengin­g Suguru (right), a number cell game that a child could pick up in a couple of minutes — though its Japanese inventors claim there are 175 different mathematic­al patterns that can crop up, and learning to spot them all could keep you busy for years.

Suguru is the Japanese word for ‘excellent’ and, when you discover the joys of solving its riddle, you’ll know how it got its name.

Tomorrow, we’ll introduce you to the mini-puzzle that needs a big brain to conquer it — Suko.

On Wednesday, it’s Futoshiki, a game that might remind you of bruce Forsyth’s Play Your Cards right. It’s all about going higher or lower.

Then on Thursday, it’s your chance to learn Train Tracks, the game that takes you from a to b. It might look like child’s play but, just like travelling on our own railway network, it’s a challenge.

and finally, on Friday, we introduce Killer Sudoku . . . the name says it all! From Easter Monday onwards, Train Tracks and Killer Sudoku will be published in the paper from Monday to Friday, and in Weekend Magazine on Saturdays. Meanwhile, Suguru, Suko and Futoshiki will appear in the Saturday paper.

but fear not. Helping you every step of the way will be the nation’s conundrum queen, Carol Vorderman.

Drawing on a lifetime’s experience of solving puzzles, not to mention a degree in engineerin­g from Cambridge and more than 25 years on TV’s Countdown, Carol (right) will be giving you tips, pointing out pitfalls and applying relentless logic to every new game.

‘I can’t wait,’ says Carol. ‘There’s nothing more satisfying than cracking a challengin­g new number game, and it’s very exciting that the Mail is introducin­g five this week. I’ve got more than a few puzzler trade secrets to reveal, to help you master even the trickiest of the bunch.’

and you can find more games in the interactiv­e version of the paper, Mail Plus, available for tablets and smartphone­s at — visit the website to find out more.

So what are you waiting for? Get puzzling! read on for Carol’s tips on solving the first of our new puzzles.

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