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3,12,12,10,4
As for how to do each puzzle. The first one is a logic puzzle, shame on you if you can't get it in the first try.
The one that was hardest to me was atually the fruit one because you can overthink the clues. So I'll just point out that if you overthink it, all four fruits can be peeled, but the game wants you to think only the bannna and orange are the fruit with peels. The solution is fairly obvious after that.
The one with the knights and numbers (where the answer is the remaining 3's) you have to actually use the hint markers to fill out the board, so each row/column doesn't have any repeating numbers. eg
4,3,2,1
1,2,3,4
3,1,4,2
2,4,1,3
(That might not be the solution)
The one with the numbers and black spaces (the picross one,) the hint isn't really helpful. What it wants you to do is fill out the row/column with the black spaces that correspond with the numbers consecutively.
eg (this was the solution for me, so spoilers, but I might mis-remember it)
1,1,1 X_X_X
5 XXXXX
1,1 _X_X_
1,1 _X_X_
3 _XXX_
24242
1
It looks like a castle tower
The one with the numbers and math, that one is easy to figure out, shame on you if you have to take more than one try.
Basically this is how it works, first and second-to-last puzzles (assuming they're in the same order each time) can be trial-and-errored if you're not into it. Five of the puzzles have to be solved to solve the sixth one. Three of the first five puzzles the game developers could probably randomize and people would still ask for help.
Picross is actually pretty easy. The numbers next to the rows and collums show you how many connected spaces you have to check. Figured out what they are is a process of logical deduction, there is literally only one way you can work it so that the correct number of spaces are checked in each row and column.
Here is a basic tutorial for this kind of puzzle:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-I5Ng2oYyM