Quick puzzles using digits 1–4 in 2×2 boxes.
Beginner guide
4×4 Mini Sudoku is the fastest way to learn how Sudoku works. The board has only sixteen cells, but it teaches the same core idea used in every larger Sudoku puzzle: place each digit once in every row, column, and box. Instead of digits 1–9, this smaller puzzle uses only 1, 2, 3, and 4. Instead of 3×3 boxes, the board is divided into four 2×2 boxes. That compact layout makes each round quick, clear, and easy to read on both desktop and mobile screens.
This page is designed for short practice sessions. You can open a puzzle, solve a few cells, and understand why each answer belongs where it does. No calculation is needed. Sudoku is a logic puzzle, not a math test. The digits are simply symbols. The real skill is noticing what is already present, removing impossible choices, and placing the only value that still fits.
Fill every empty cell with a digit from 1 to 4. Each row must contain 1, 2, 3, and 4 exactly once. Each column must also contain those four digits exactly once. Finally, each 2×2 box must contain the same complete set.
If a row already has 1, 2, and 4, the missing cell must be 3. If a box already has 2, 3, and 4, the empty cell must be 1. Most beginner puzzles are solved by repeating this simple check across rows, columns, and boxes.
A small grid lets you see the result of each decision immediately, so mistakes are easier to understand.
Rows, columns, and boxes are short enough that beginners can compare them without feeling overloaded.
The same elimination habit used here carries directly into 6×6 and classic 9×9 Sudoku.
Easy 4×4 Sudoku usually gives you several nearly complete rows or boxes. It is best for learning the rules and building confidence. Medium puzzles leave fewer obvious singles, so you may need to compare a row with a box before placing a digit. Hard 4×4 puzzles are still short, but they can ask you to hold two or three possibilities in mind before the next placement becomes clear.
If you are new, start with Easy and solve without rushing. When you can finish several puzzles without guessing, move to Medium. Hard is useful when you want a quick puzzle that still requires careful attention.
Once 4×4 puzzles feel natural, try 6×6 Mini Sudoku. It keeps the game compact but adds two more digits and rectangular 2×3 boxes. After that, classic Easy Sudoku is the right next step. You will already understand the most important skill: every number must earn its place by fitting all three units at the same time.
4x4 Mini Sudoku is a smaller Sudoku puzzle played on a 4 by 4 grid. You use the digits 1, 2, 3, and 4, and each row, column, and 2 by 2 box must contain each digit once.
Yes. The 4x4 format is one of the best ways to learn Sudoku because the rules are the same as classic Sudoku, but the grid is small enough to understand quickly.
Most 4x4 Sudoku puzzles take less than a minute once you know the rules. Hard 4x4 puzzles can take longer because they ask you to think ahead and compare several empty cells.
Move to 6x6 Mini Sudoku when 4x4 puzzles feel comfortable. It adds more cells and 2 by 3 boxes while keeping the game shorter than a full 9x9 Sudoku.