Sudoku maker Maki Kaji who saw lifes joy in puzzles dies
TOKYO (AP) â" Maki Kaji, the creator of the popular numbers puzzle Sudoku whose lifeâs work was spreading the joy of puzzles, has died, his Japanese company said Tuesday. He was 69 and had bile duct cancer.
Known as the âGodfather of Sudoku,â Kaji created the puzzle to be easy for children and others who didnât want to think too hard. Its name is made up of the Japanese characters for ânumberâ and âsingle,â and players place the numbers 1 through 9 in rows, columns and blocks without repeating them.
Ironically, it wasnât until 2004 when Sudoku became a global hit, after a fan from New Zealand pitched it and got it published in the British newspaper The Times. Two years later, Japan rediscovered its own puzzle as a âgyakuyunyu,â or âreimport.â
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Kaji was chief executive at his puzzle company, Nikoli Co., until July and died Aug. 10 at his home in Mitaka, a city in the Tokyo metro area.
Maki traveled to more than 30 countries spreading his enjoyment of puzzles. Sudoku championships have drawn some 200 million people in 100 countries over the years, according to Tokyo-based Nikoli.
Sudoku was also never trademarked except within Japan, driving its overseas craze, Nikoli said.
âKaji-san came up with the name Sudoku and was loved by puzzle fans from all over the world. We are grateful from the bottom of our hearts for the patronage you have shown throughout his life,â the company said in a statement.
Originally, Sudoku was called âSuji-wa-Dokushin-ni-Kagiru,â which translates to, âNumbers should be single, a bachelor.â In recent years, Sudoku, believed to be the worldâs most popular pencil puzzle, has come out in digital versions.
Born in the main northern island of Hokkaido, Maki started Japanâs first puzzle magazine after dropping out of Keio University in Tokyo. He founded Nikoli in 1983, and came up with Sudoku about the same time.
Yoshinao Anpuku, who succeeded Kaji as Nikoliâs chief executive, said Kaji made friends easily and had a âunique and playful approach toward life.â
âOur mission is to pursue Makiâs vision and possibilities,â Anpuku said.
Nikoli has provided original puzzles to more than 100 media companies, 10 of them foreign ones.
Major Japanese newspaper Mainichi in its obituary credited Kaji for starting the puzzle sections at bookstores, as well as introducing the word âSudokuâ into the Oxford English dictionary.
Kaji is survived by his wife Naomi and two daughters. Funeral services have been held among close family. A separate memorial service is being arranged by Nikoli, but details were still undecided.
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