Medium 16×16 Hyper Sudoku

Step it up! Medium 16×16 Hyper Sudoku has fewer starter numbers, so you will rely on Auto Notes and a bit of careful scanning. Perfect for kids who have solved a few Easy hyper-sized puzzles.

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Mistakes: 0

Hints: 0

What changes on Medium?

Medium 16×16 Hyper Sudoku drops a handful of the starter numbers you saw on Easy. That means more of the puzzle is solved by careful scanning, not by spotting the obvious row/column clues. Don't panic — every Medium puzzle on this site still has exactly one solution, and you can always find it without guessing.

If Medium feels like a big jump from Easy, that is normal. Most kids spend a couple of weeks at Easy before Medium starts to feel comfortable. For a refresher on the basics, the 16×16 Sudoku page has the full rules with worked examples.

Three scanning tricks to try

  1. Number sweep

    Pick one number — say 11. Look at every box on the board and ask "could an 11 go here?" If a box already has an 11, skip it. If a box only has one cell where an 11 could fit, write it in. Repeat for every number from 1 to 16.

  2. Box-fill

    Find the fullest box. Whatever numbers are missing usually only fit in one or two places. Fill those, then move to the next-fullest box.

  3. Sum to 136

    Each row, column and box adds to 136. If a row is nearly full and the visible numbers add to 125, the missing number must be 11. A surprisingly useful check on a hyper-sized board.

How to spot a forced number

A "forced number" is when only one digit can go in a cell, no matter how you look at it. Spotting them is the main skill on Medium. Here is the order we recommend: check the row, then the column, then the 4×4 box. If that leaves only one legal number, write it in.

On a 16×16, the cell you are looking at sees 15 row peers, 15 column peers and 15 box peers. That is a LOT of clues. With Auto Notes turned on, the candidates are already filled in for you, so finding cells with only one candidate is the main trick.

When you place a real number, glance back at every row, column and box that touches it. Cells that had two candidates often drop to one — those are your next moves.

When you get stuck

  • ✏️ Turn on Auto Notes — on a 16×16 this is hugely useful
  • 🔎 Tap Check to make sure every filled cell is still correct
  • 💡 Tap Hint to fill one cell (it counts in your stats, but it is okay!)
  • ↻ Tap Undo to go back if a guess turned out wrong

Ready for the next step?

When Medium 16×16 Hyper Sudoku puzzles take you under 20 minutes, give Hard 16×16 Sudoku a try. Hard puzzles have a lot fewer givens and you will need every trick from this page plus a few more.

Frequently asked questions

How long should Medium 16×16 take?

Most kids finish a Medium 16×16 in 20 to 35 minutes. If it takes longer, that is fine — use Notes and tap Check whenever you want to make sure you are on track.

Can I switch back to Easy?

Of course — just tap the Easy tab at the top of the board. Your Medium puzzle saves automatically.

Are there fewer starter numbers than classic Medium 9×9?

A bit fewer, in proportion. Because the board is so much bigger, the puzzle still feels solvable even with more empty cells.

Should I memorise anything?

Not really. Just get used to scanning every row, column and box every time you place a digit. After three or four puzzles, the habit becomes automatic.

Try other sudoku games

Different rules, same friendly board. Pick a sibling puzzle to play next.