I've been messing around with Sudoku for a while and it's not clear to me how everyone apparently can clear a hard Sudoku in like 3 minutes. One time I tried entering the numbers into a Sudoku solver and it took me 2 minutes just to type the solution in for a top 1% percentile score, and yes technically it might have taken longer if you can just immediately see the solution as opposed to copy the first 20 tiles into a solver but I really doubt people are that good at this. I understand the concept behind Sudoku, and I know people get a lot of practices at it, but I don't see how you can solve these really fast without some kind of written tool. There's a lot of numbers you have to keep track of, and when you're doing it electronically there's no easy way to keep track of them unless you got some writing material on the side.
Now if you can mark the electronic versions square with stuff like 'this square can be 123' I'm sure you can solve it way faster, since once you mark enough of that stuff down you'll see some pretty obvious patterns. I find a lot of the time it's like you'll get say 10 sets of numbers that can either be A or B and then somewhere really further down the chain you can figure out that it has to be A and then it unwinds like 10 boxes and that essentially solves the whole thing, but it's really hard to keep track of multiple chains of pairs or even worse triplets without some kind of visual.
Now if you can mark the electronic versions square with stuff like 'this square can be 123' I'm sure you can solve it way faster, since once you mark enough of that stuff down you'll see some pretty obvious patterns. I find a lot of the time it's like you'll get say 10 sets of numbers that can either be A or B and then somewhere really further down the chain you can figure out that it has to be A and then it unwinds like 10 boxes and that essentially solves the whole thing, but it's really hard to keep track of multiple chains of pairs or even worse triplets without some kind of visual.