Kaji Maki: First he gave us sudoku
He unleashed sudoku on an unsuspecting world - and within months, millions
were hooked. But Japan's master of the mind-bender didn't stop there. From his
workshop in the heart of Tokyo, Maki Kaji is devising a new, even more
fiendish wave of puzzles.
David McNeill meets him.
Affable, chain-smoking, slightly disheveled in jeans and sports jacket, Kaji
Maki is an unlikely corporate titan. He happily admits that he'd rather be
hanging around a racetrack betting on nags than plotting global domination.
But for Japan's puzzle king and, as his business card proudly states, the
father of sudoku, world domination is now very much on the agenda.
The maddening numbers game the 55-year-old college dropout unleashed on an
unsuspecting planet now appears in more than 600 newspapers, on thousands of
websitesand in dozens of books in about 70 countries. Last year, 20 nations
took part in the first sudoku world championship in Italy. In Britain, some
fear that its runaway popularity may even kill off the musty newspaper
crossword.
Unsurprisingly, then, most visitors to Nikoli, the Tokyo firm Kaji named after
the winner of the Irish 2,000 Guineas in 1980, want to know one thing: what
will he do for an encore? "I don't know," he says, smiling through an
ever-present cloud of cigarette smoke. "We had no idea sudoku would be so
successful. It depends on what our writers come up with."
http://www.japanfocus.org/images/UserFiles/Image/2415a.mcneill.sudoku/KAJI01.Robert%20Gilhooly.jpg
Kaji Maki (Photograph by Robert Gilhooly)
We're sitting in what some have dubbed the puzzle palace, a narrow building in
an unfashionable business district of Tokyo. Below us, in an atmosphere
resembling a convention of chess players, a small, earnest team edits and
refines the 1,000 puzzles that flood into the company every month. Among the
handful that will be added to the company's roster and road-tested in this
puzzle-mad country could lurk the new sudoku.
It is from here that recent successes, including Kakuro and Slitherlink - a
local hit - first emerged. The creative engine-room, however, is mostly
elsewhere, in bedrooms, kitchens and commuter trains across Japan. Nikoli's
puzzle writers, who design 90 per cent of the games and work for a flat fee,
are drawn from a cross-section of ordinary Japanese life: teenagers,
housewives, salarymen and pensioners. Two-thirds of them are high school and
university students; the oldest is an 81-year-old retired teacher.
What they have in common, Kaji says, is inventiveness, a willingness to
"serve" others, and time - lots of time. "Students like to sit around and
dream up games," he says. Some develop a couple of hit puzzles, then don suits
and ties and disappear for ever into company life. "They sometimes send us an
apology before they begin working."
Kaji says he feels their pain. In the early 1970s, his life appeared similarly
mapped out when he began studying literature at Keio University, one of
Japan's most prestigious private colleges and a passport to corporate success.
But he found it "boring", and began gambling and playing tennis. After he quit
in his first year he tried being a waiter, a roadie and a construction worker
before setting up a small publishing business.
The one consistent thread in his life has been his love of gambling and
chance. But the winning formula for a head-scratching classic remains a
mystery to him, even after a quarter of a century pondering its alchemy. "We
have no idea what makes something popular, so we try them out on the readers,"
he says in the austere president's office, where almost the only color comes
from portraits of racehorses on seat cushions. "About once every five years,
one suddenly takes off. It's as big a surprise to us as anybody else."
Kaji is also no wiser about why Japan is such a good incubator of puzzles,
though he does have theories. "The Japanese like to improve and study and
challenge themselves in their free time. In other parts of the world, I've
seen people just chill out and do nothing." Number games have a long history
in Japan - unlike crossword puzzles, which struggle to accommodate the complex
written language.
As for why sudoku was embraced by the UK, he says its compactness helped, as
did the fact that "Britain picks up on new trends quickly, like Japan". Kaji
famously saw sudoku's ancestor, Number Place, in a US magazine in 1984,
rearranged the numbers and grids and released it in Japan. More than a decade
later, a retired Hong Kong court judge, Wayne Gould, picked it up on a trip to
Tokyo, tinkered with it on his computer and sent it off to a UK newspaper.
Today, the popularity of the nine-by-nine grid has mushroomed across an
ever-growing range of formats, including computer games and internet
downloads. Sudoku is embedded in mainstream culture, joining a proud gallery
of popular brainteasers such as the crossword, jigsaw puzzle and Rubik's cube.
The man who launched it, however, has seen very little of the loot it has
generated worldwide. Like Inoue Daisuke,
[japanfocus.org/products/details/1833] the amateur inventor who put together
the first karaoke machine, Kaji did not patent his discovery. And, like Inoue,
he seems equally unfazed. "More than the money, it is gratifying to see the
explosive worldwide growth of our puzzles. That makes me very happy."
The absence of copyright helped the game to sweep unhindered across the world,
allowing Kaji to ride along in its jet stream and sell Nikoli puzzle books,
calendars and other merchandise. But Nikoli still has an annual turnover of
just $4m and employs 22 people, six more than before the sudoku behemoth
slipped its leash in 2005.
http://www.japanfocus.org/images/UserFiles/Image/2415a.mcneill.sudoku/KAJI02.gilhooly.jpg
Kaji and puzzle (Photo by Robert Gilhooly)
The company has never used a distributor or advertised in its 27-year history,
and still relies heavily on its quarterly publication and books to spread the
word. The puzzle operation is, in Kaji's words, still stubbornly analogue. "We
make up the puzzles by hand, not on computers, because then the character and
individuality of the writer are allowed to come out."
His team's priority when creating or accessing a game, he explains, is simply
this: will it be interesting and fun? "We're not trying to make something
educational. It is better to think of what we do as entertainment." The aim,
he says, is to make the mind go blank; to change the mood of the average
exhausted commuter riding home from a day's grind at the office.
"We started as amateurs, so we're always thinking about the average person. We
make the entry point for each game relatively easy but the exit point
difficult, so that ordinary people can join in. Look at sudoku: anybody from
five to 90 can play it." He recently told The Japan Times that his favorite
puzzles make him laugh: "Ones with humor and pathos, ones you get angry with,
that make you throw up your hands and cry, 'I can't do this!'"
The huge success of sudoku has inevitably made him a wanted man. On his dozen
regular annual trips to Europe and America, he is harangued by publishers
demanding a lucrative follow-up. Kaji does little to dampen the fervor,
regularly telling interviewees that there are plenty more potential hits among
the 300 or so games on the company's roster, most of them unknown outside
Japan.
http://www.japanfocus.org/images/UserFiles/Image/2415a.mcneill.sudoku/sudokupuzzle.nikoli.jpeg
Puzzle by Nikoli
A couple of times a year a bigger company calls with an offer to take over his
business, or to turn Nikoli into the McDonald's or Toyota of the puzzle world.
So far, he says, he has had little difficulty turning them down. "I want to
keep the company small and compact, like a submarine with a small family of
employees who are close. We like to keep things easy-going." He says he has
little interest in getting any bigger. "I like the idea of a specialist
home-made cake shop that runs out at 3 pm, and then we all just go home."
Oddly, Nikoli and its founder are better known in America and Europe than in
the country that gave them to the world, but he says that will change as the
internet helps to spread the company's fame. "Our name is now linked to
sudoku, so a lot of people here are wondering what's next." He says he plans
"sons of sudoku and kakuro", and harder, more specialist games for
puzzle-lovers. He is also negotiating the foreign launch of puzzles already
road-tested, including Slitherlink.
The launch of a new game is inevitably followed by a blizzard of
foreign-language emails that crash the company's website. Two years ago, he
says, the company rarely checked emails - until they found thousands of
messages after the launch of sudoku in Britain. "We had no idea what had
happened," he says, admitting that they couldn't read most of them.
Otherwise, though, life is unchanged - except that Kaji no longer has to go
out and beg people to buy his puzzles. "I always found it stressful having to
bow to people, so lately life has been more comfortable. Now that I'm on a
more equal footing I can finally relax and enjoy meeting people."
The late-life fame has had at least one drawback, however: it has robbed Kaji
of his precious racetrack time. He says he started betting on horses when he
was young, and by now has been to most of the world's big racetracks. When he
can, he still goes at weekends. "It's a mental break from everyday life with
my family and work. It makes me excited. There's the whole history of the
track and the horses. As soon I set foot on a racetrack, I lose all sense of
time and money."
He describes watching the finish of a race as like trying to solve a puzzle.
"The excitement of not knowing how it is going to end up is similar. But I
control myself, only betting about 10,000 yen a day. It is an exercise in
self-control."
In 1986, he wanted to find out the fate of the Irish-born horse Nikoli that
had inspired his little company. Eventually, Kaji found him in Uruguay. "He
was retired and taking it easy after a lifetime of entertaining people. I
thought that was cool."
This a revised and expanded version of an article that appeared in The
Independent on May 2, 2007. It is posted at Japan Focus on May 5, 2007.
David McNeill writes regularly for the Chronicle of Higher Education, the
London Independent and other publications. He is a coordinator of Japan Focus.
Robert Gilhooly's photographs can be found on his website.
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