🕵️‍♂️ClueDaily

Daily Puzzle

Errors: 0
A1
A2
A3
A4
A5
B1
B2
B3
B4
B5
C1
C2
C3
C4
C5
D1
D2
D3
D4
D5
E1
E2
E3
E4
E5
Innocent
Criminal
Unknown

What's new

Solution steps

Toggle “Solution Steps” in the toolbar to view the full reasoning path.

Next-step hint

Use the hint button to highlight your next solvable targets.

Share

After solving, copy a summary to compare paths with friends.

How to play

  1. Goal: determine whether each person is a criminal or innocent.
  2. Use known clues to judge a suspect; correct judgments reveal new clues.
  3. No guessing needed: there is always a purely logical next move.
New here? Start with the 4x4 tutorial .

Rule clarifications

  • Everyone is either criminal or innocent.
  • Everyone tells the truth (including criminals).
  • “Neighbor” includes diagonal neighbors (up to 8).
  • “Between” excludes the endpoints.
  • “Connected” means orthogonally adjacent chains (up/down/left/right).
  • “Left/Right/Up/Down” means anywhere in same row/column; “adjacent” means next to.
  • Numbers are exact unless the clue says otherwise (at least/at most/maybe).
  • “If A then B” is not “iff”, but contrapositive reasoning applies.

FAQ

Is this game free?

Yes, ClueDaily is completely free to play. We may add optional support features in the future, but the core daily puzzle will always be free.

Do I need to guess?

No. Every puzzle is designed to be solvable purely through logic. If you feel stuck, try looking for a different clue or perspective.

When does the new puzzle update?

A new puzzle is released every day at midnight (local time).

What Players Say

"Finally, a logic puzzle that doesn't require guessing! The dependency system is brilliant."

— LogicFan99

"Perfect for my morning coffee routine. Challenging but fair."

— DailySolver

"I love the clean interface and the way clues are presented."

— MinimalistGamer

Tips

  • Start from positions that are uniquely determined; avoid branching too early.
  • Stuck? Use the hint button to highlight your next target.
  • After solving, share your case summary to compare reasoning paths.