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    Sudoku Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of Sudoku? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Sudoku from Board & Card Games and what is the personality traits.

    Sudoku
    INTP

    INTP (5w6)

    Sudoku personality type is INTP, according to the MBTI.

    While the MBTI focuses on identifying how your preferences in thinking, feeling, and behaving are expressed, it's also helpful in understanding how you tend to make decisions in your life, how you choose to focus your energy, and what triggers you.

    Let's say that the MBTI is saying that you are a "sudoku person."

    You are an INTP with strong preferences for cognition, logic, analysis, and objective observation.

    You are also an introvert, which means that you are more comfortable when you are alone.

    You are less likely to share your thoughts or feelings with others, preferring to work alone or perhaps with a close friend or significant other.

    You are more likely to be objective in your approach to life, working with facts, data, and information instead of emotional reactions. There is also a strong possibility that you have an area of weakness in your feeling function.

    The last point is important because it means that you may have a tendency to ignore or not feel the feelings of others, which can be especially difficult after conflict occurs.

    If this is true about you, then you are probably an INTP Sudoku person.

    Sudoku is a logic-based, combinatorial number-placement puzzle. In classic sudoku, the objective is to fill a 9×9 grid with digits so that each column, each row, and each of the nine 3×3 subgrids that compose the grid contain all of the digits from 1 to 9. The puzzle setter provides a partially completed grid, which for a well-posed puzzle has a single solution. French newspapers featured variations of the Sudoku puzzles in the 19th century, and the puzzle has appeared since 1979 in puzzle books under the name Number Place. However, the modern Sudoku only began to gain widespread popularity in 1986 when it was published by the Japanese puzzle company Nikoli under the name Sudoku, meaning "single number". It first appeared in a U.S. newspaper, and then The Times, in 2004, thanks to the efforts of Wayne Gould, who devised a computer program to rapidly produce unique puzzles.

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