Printable Sudoku
Classic 9x9 number grids for easy, medium, hard and expert paper solving.
Printable SudokuPrintable logic puzzles hub
A central home for paper-friendly logic puzzles. Printable PDFs are being prepared, and this page will gather Sudoku, Kakuro, Nonogram, Norinori and future puzzle sheets by type and difficulty.
Printable PDFs coming soon
Each section below is planned as its own printable collection. Until the PDFs are ready, use the live online games to practise the rules and get comfortable with each puzzle style.
Classic 9x9 number grids for easy, medium, hard and expert paper solving.
Printable SudokuCross-sum number puzzles with compact grids, larger challenges and answer sheets.
Printable KakuroPicture logic grids with row and column clues, ready for careful pencil work.
Printable NonogramsShading puzzles where every region gets exactly two shaded cells in domino pairs.
Printable NorinoriPrintable logic puzzles are puzzles designed to be solved on paper instead of inside an app. You can print a sheet, use pencil marks, cross out possibilities, and work through the grid at your own pace.
The best printable puzzle pages are simple and practical. They should make the puzzle itself easy to read, keep instructions close by, and provide answer sheets so solvers can check their work without hunting around the site.
This page will stay as the main hub for printable logic puzzles. As each PDF collection is added, the relevant card will become a live link to a focused printable page for that puzzle type.
The goal is to keep each printable collection useful rather than thin: grouped difficulty levels, clear print layouts, and answer keys where they help. The online game pages will remain the place to practise interactively.
Paper solving feels different from online play. You can circle clues, add pencil candidates, leave a puzzle on the table, or print a few sheets for travel, classrooms, clubs and quiet screen-free breaks.
Printable puzzles are also useful for learning. A beginner can annotate every step, while experienced solvers can take on harder grids without timers, popups or interface decisions getting in the way.
Choose Sudoku if you want familiar number logic and steady deduction. Choose Kakuro if you enjoy arithmetic combinations. Choose Nonograms if you like visual progress and clue counting. Choose Norinori if you want a compact shading puzzle with elegant constraints.
When the printable collections are live, start with easy sheets if you are learning a puzzle type for the first time. Medium is usually best for everyday solving, while hard and expert sheets are better for longer quiet sessions.
FAQ
Not yet. This is the starter hub page, and the individual printable PDF collections will be added after the first game pages are in place.
Printable Sudoku is usually the easiest place to start because the rules are familiar. Nonograms are also beginner-friendly when the grids are small.
Yes, answer sheets are planned so each printable collection can be checked after solving.
Yes. Sudoku, Kakuro, Nonogram and Norinori already have online game pages linked from this hub.