Nonograms are incredible. They’re rewarding puzzles that make you feel accomplished for figuring out the hidden pixel image in a systematically designed grid. Basically, these are picture logic puzzles where you target each cell and paint it black, white, or in color, such that the rows and columns of the grid accurately follow the corresponding numerical clues. Puzzlers know how fascinating the game is, but do you know it has equally fascinating facts as well? Keep reading to know more…
1. A Japanese graphics editor invented the game
Non Ishida is credited for the invention of Nonogram, a.k.a. Griddler puzzles. After she won a competition in Tokyo in 1987, a brilliant idea struck her. She had designed a grid image with the help of on/ off skyscraper lights in the competition, and this gave birth to the nonogram number-placement puzzles in 1988. In the beginning, she only got three of her puzzles published. But, it was James Dalgety in 1990 who helped her commercialize these worldwide.
2. A UK newspaper recognized its potential
It was The Sunday Telegraph newspaper in the UK that realized the potential of these puzzles and has been publishing them since the 90s. Earlier, the nonogram puzzles were published every week, and the winner was awarded a £50 book token. But, 07/19/1998 was the last time the paper presented these puzzles under the name “Nonogram.”
3. The term was coined in a competition
When Non Ishida published the book of nonograms, it brought about a revolution. Later that year, The Sunday Telegraph Book of Nonograms was also published in the United Kingdom by Pan Books, spreading these even in the US and South Africa. However, Ishida wanted to use the term “Nonogram” exclusively, so, in 1998, the newspaper hosted a competition to choose a different term for their puzzles, where “Gridder” was the winning title, and the prize money was £250.
4. Griddlers were made famous by Nintendo
Due to the originality and creativity of griddlers, these puzzles emerged out of the magazine pages. What popularized griddlers were Nintendo video games in 1995 when they picked up the fad and released two variants for the Game Boy and nine variants for the Super Famicom. All of these were in Japan, but Mario’s Picross was released outside.
5. It has more than 30 names
Yes, the griddlers also known as nonograms, are amongst those few games that have a variety of names all over the world. The common ones include Pixel Puzzles, Paint by Numbers, Japanese Crosswords, Pic-a-Pix, Picross, Hanjie, Cross Numbers, Picture Cross and many others.
So, if you’re a gaming enthusiast and want to try your hands on a classic puzzle like griddlers, here’s one that’ll solve the purpose. Easybrain’s Nonogram.com griddler app takes something that’s already great and attempts to invite all the players to challenge their skills and master the realm. It’s very much like the original paper-pen griddler, just that the gameplay is more intuitive, convenient, and huge.
Enjoy!