Hanjie Puzzles
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Hanjie traces its roots to Japan, where this puzzle format first appeared in the late 1980s. The name reflects the Japanese heritage of nonogram puzzles, and solving a hanjie connects you to the original tradition of picture logic puzzles that has captivated millions worldwide.
Japanese Puzzle Origins
Japanese puzzle designer Non Ishida is credited with creating the first nonogram in 1987. She based the concept on skyscraper windows being lit or dark, which naturally created grid-based pictures. The puzzle format was independently developed by Tetsuya Nishio around the same time. From these Japanese origins, hanjie puzzles spread worldwide under various names. The Japanese tradition emphasizes elegant puzzle construction where the revealed image is as important as the solving experience.
Our Hanjie Collection
We offer hanjie puzzles in 5x5, 10x10, 15x15, and 20x20 grid sizes. Each puzzle features carefully designed clue patterns that lead to satisfying pixel art, honoring the Japanese tradition of combining logic with visual artistry. All puzzles have unique solutions reachable through pure deduction.
Getting Started with Hanjie
If you are new to hanjie, start with a 5x5 puzzle to learn the basic rules. The clue numbers along the top and left edges tell you which cells to fill, and the solving process uses the same overlap logic and deduction techniques as any nonogram variant.
What is hanjie?
Hanjie is the original Japanese name for nonogram/picross puzzles. The name means roughly "shaded picture" in Japanese. Hanjie puzzles follow the same rules as nonogram: fill cells in a grid according to row and column clue numbers to reveal a hidden pixel art picture.
Where did hanjie originate?
Hanjie was invented by Non Ishida, a Japanese graphics editor, in the 1980s. The puzzle was later popularized internationally under the names nonogram and picross. The fundamental rules have remained unchanged since their invention — a testament to the puzzle's elegant design.