
LinkedIn rolls out ‘Mini Sudoku' puzzle game created with world champion Thomas Snyder
Instead of the traditional 9-by-9 grid, Mini Sudoku by LinkedIn is scaled down to a 6-by-6 grid puzzle that is supposed to be completed in two or three minutes. Mini Sudoku becomes harder to solve with every passing day of the week, similar to other puzzle-based games on LinkedIn.
With Mini Sudoku, LinkedIn might be looking to play to the nostalgia of users. It could also lead to healthy competition between colleagues, friends and family members in terms of who can solve the puzzle first. Besides giving users something new to talk about, LinkedIn is likely introducing games on its platforms to boost engagement and user retention times.
'We don't want to have a puzzle on LinkedIn that takes 20 minutes to solve, right? We're not games for games' sake,' Lakshman Somasundaram, a senior director of product at LinkedIn, was quoted as saying by CNBC.
Mini Sudoku was reportedly conceived based on an encounter between LinkedIn executives and Japanese publisher Nikoli, which popularised Sudoku, in Tokyo, Japan last year. Thomas Snyder, a three-time World Sudoku Championship winner, was also involved in helping LinkedIn design its gaming strategy for Mini Sudoku.
Seeking to make the ancient game more accessible, the Microsoft-backed company reportedly designed several prototypes before finalising the version with six rows and six columns of squares.
Mini Sudoku is the sixth game rolled out by LinkedIn so far. Millions of people play games on LinkedIn with 7am ET (4:30 pm IST) being the most popular time among users to play the game and Gen Z users on LinkedIn being the top demographic, a company spokesperson was quoted as saying.
Over 86 per cent of the users who play regularly will return tomorrow, and 82 per cent of them will be playing next week, the spokesperson added.
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Mint
27 minutes ago
- Mint
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Business Standard
an hour ago
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IREL seeks Japan, South Korea partnerships for rare earth magnet production
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Hindustan Times
an hour ago
- Hindustan Times
India needs homegrown management consultancies
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For a country that seeks to lead in the decades ahead, shaping these worldviews becomes a strategic imperative. This is not about displacing international firms. It's about widening the field and ensuring that Indian firms with the capability and context get a seat at the table. Firms like YCP Auctus, Praxis Global Alliance, Takshashila Consulting, Redseer Strategy Consultants, Zinnov, and Vector Consulting Group are built in India but work across the globe. In the case of YCP Auctus, more than 40% of revenue comes from international clients. Vector Consulting Group works extensively across Asia, driving supply chain and operational improvements. These firms are globally integrated and culturally agile. India is not their boundary but their launchpad. Some of them have attracted long-term investment from Japanese partners, underscoring their global preparedness. This is an evolution from support functions to strategic leadership. India began as the world's back office, moved up to strategic GCCs, and today leads the world in Artificial Intelligence (AI). India-bred firms like Fractal Analytics, Quantiphi and LatentView are solving high-value analytics problems using Indian talent, platforms, and delivery models. Management consulting is the next logical step. The underlying capabilities of structured problem-solving, functional expertise, sectoral depth and execution discipline are already established. The time has come for Indian firms to shape global strategy. Many have scaled, with teams of over 200 consultants. They recruit from top institutes in the same slot as global majors. Having worked with governments, unicorns, and conglomerates, these firms bring contextual judgment and deep institutional memory. India-based operating models enable these firms to deliver top-tier advisory at a fraction of global prices. For most clients, whether established conglomerates or emerging companies, this quality-to-cost ratio is a decisive advantage. For Indian firms to become globally influential, they must build intellectual property. Global firms like McKinsey gained ground not just through execution, but by shaping the discourse through platforms like The McKinsey Quarterly. India-bred firms must do the same. Thought capital in areas like digital public goods, infrastructure, skilling, or inclusive growth can become both a differentiator and a bridge to influence. Equally important is fostering alumni networks, institutional memory, and repeat ecosystems to create trust and longevity. Management consulting can amplify India's influence across the Global South. The opportunity for Indian management consulting firms is no longer confined to traditional clients. Today, economies across the broader Global South are seeking advisory partners who can balance vision with pragmatism, scale with sensitivity. Indian firms, having operated in similarly complex and dynamic environments, are well positioned to meet this need. Whether it's modernising logistics in East Africa, redesigning skilling ecosystems in Southeast Asia, or supporting state reforms in West Asia, Indian consultants bring more than just capability. They bring shared context. In doing so, they export Indian models of execution, collaboration, and innovation. That is soft power in action and an enabler of diplomacy. To realise this potential, Indian firms need better access to Boards and procurement channels. Governments and private clients can play a critical role by creating a level-playing field where Indian firms are evaluated based on capability and fit, not just brand. Indian conglomerates, emerging companies, PE funds, and PSUs can serve as launchpads for Indian firms to build transformational proof points. And perhaps NASSCOM can broaden its remit to include management consulting as a strategic capability for global export. India has long proven its ability to deliver talent to the world. The next step is to deliver intellectual leadership. If we want to shape how the world thinks about business and development, we must invest in our own institutions of strategic thought. Abhisek Mukherjee is managing partner, YCP Auctus. The views expressed are personal.