![]() Therefore the squares above and below are ship segments (denoted by dots) and three more squares are filled with water. Square F10 is a middle segment of a ship so it must be part of a battleship or a cruiser and must be oriented vertically because it is touching the frame of the gird. We can now place the other end segment and fill the ten squares surrounding the destroyer with water by marking them with an X. Since the count of row C is two, this ship must be a destroyer. Square C4 contains the end segment of a ship, which means there is another part of the ship in C5. Since submarines consist of one segment, all neighboring squares of H8 must be filled with water by marking them with an X. Let’s start with the puzzle below which contains three given ship segments and two given water segments. Fill what you know around given ship segments: The most popular Battleship grid size is 10x10 with a fleet of one battleship, two cruisers, three destroyers and four submarines as shown below. Ships may be oriented horizontally or vertically without touching each other, not even diagonally, and sometimes a few squares may be revealed with hints to start you off. The numbers on the right and on the bottom of the grid indicate how many squares in the corresponding row and column are occupied by ship segments. The goal is to reveal the fleet by logically deducing the location of ship segment. Battleship is a find-the-fleet puzzle based on a grid representing an ocean section with a fleet of ships hidden inside. ![]()
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