Piczle Cross: Rune Factoryis filled to the brim with nonograms to puzzle out, both in the traditional black and white and in a stylish colour mode, which turns a collection of 300 items, NPCs, and monsters into a whopping 600 puzzles overall. Ranging from terribly easy to incredibly difficult, this provides a fantastic range of experiences for those new to nonograms.

While the in-game tutorial does a great job at explaining the basics to you - how exactly a nonogram is solved and the changes that you must consider when trying out a colour puzzle - there are some tried and tested tips that will make your experience just that little bit smoother.

A colour puzzle half completed in Piczle Cross Rune Factory.

Start With The Filled Rows

A good deal of the puzzles on offer will have some rows that are basically ‘free’ to fill in without much thought.Rows that need no logicto fill in since they completely fill up a row from edge to edge with their blanks and fills give you a good start to a puzzle, letting you get a better visual image of what the result might be and where rows and columns may lie.

Checking for totally fillable rowsmultiple timesthroughout a puzzle is a good habit to form, as you’ll be surprised how often it turns out a row or column is totally fillable based on a few things filled in.

A traditional puzzle mostly solved in Piczle Cross Rune Factory.

Move On To Sides

After rows and columns that are completely filled with their clues, the next step should befilling in the edgesif possible. Filled edges give you a wonderful starting point in many puzzles as you can start methodically working down a series a clues without relying on number-based guessing.

This is simply an evolution of the previous tip - fill outthat which does not require logicbefore moving onto a puzzle’s actual challenges.

A colour puzzle slightly completed in Piczle Cross Rune Factory.

You Don’t Need To Fill An Entire Sequence At Once

A handy tactic for puzzles, especially the larger ones, is to fill insquares that you know will be filled evenif you’re not sure where the sequence starts or ends.

For example, say you have a gap of seven squares and you know that it contains a single six-square sequence within it. Here, you know that the middle five squares willdefinitelybe filled in, with the final part of the six-square sequence perhaps needing other parts of the puzzle to be completed before you can finish.

The puzzle selection screen in Piczle Cross Rune Factory.

Once you’ve grasped this technique and moved away from the natural gravitation towardsfilling in sequencesonce you’ve worked out the entire string, you’ll start making far quicker progress with your puzzles.

Don’t Neglect Hints! Don’t Neglect Checks!

This game comes with two very handyquality-of-life optionsthat can seriously ease the stress with a puzzle - if that sort of thing appeals to you.

The first ishints, which are, by default, offered to you at the beginning of each non-Challenge Mode puzzle. This will pick a square on the puzzle and fill inthe entire row and columnwith all fills and crosses within. How helpful this is varies from puzzle to puzzle, and with which square it chooses to give you a hint with, so your mileage may vary.

The farm in Piczle Cross Rune Factory.

What I will say is that for a casual player, it doesn’t feel like cheating to get a little push in the right direction.

Another handy option is the ability to ‘Check For Mistakes’, which can be accessed from the pause menu during a puzzle. This will conduct a sweep of your currently-filled in puzzle and mark which squares are actually misses, and which misses are actually squares. This is handy in a few different situations:

An NPC puzzle in Piczle Cross Rune Factory.

As with the hint function, this is here to serve your needs as and when you come across them.

Neither of these features are applicable toChallenge Modepuzzles. You’re on your own with those!

Look Out For Symmetry

Many of the puzzles in Piczle Cross aresymmetrical, and it’ll become clear quite early on in a puzzle if that’s the case. Once you’ve made that leap of logic, it becomes quite easy to purposefully visualise the clues in front of you as symmetrically occurring, letting you act more decisively with guesses and root out false starts.

Be wary of puzzles thatonly look symmetrical. Some puzzles are only symmetrical in certain parts, such as the top half or for the entire puzzle barring an edge.

A Tip For Colour Puzzles

Something specific to colour puzzles is that many of them make it far easier to tell where a certain sequence of tiles will go. Specifically, this happens when acertain colour has a longer string of tilesthat can only fit in one area.

For example, if a puzzle has a string of four yellow tiles within a row, but there is only one string of columns that all feature a yellow tile, you know exactly where that four-tile sequence will go. This gives you a good place to start a puzzle.