Pete Inglesby from Wolverhampton; Patrick Snow, age 16, Dame Alice Owens School, Potters Bar; Yatir Halevi, age 18, Maccabim-Reut High-School, Israel; Andrei Lazanu, age 12, School 205, Bucharest, Romania all solved this problem. Here is Pete's solution:

Consider numbers of the form How many such numbers are perfect squares?

b b 2 Last digit of b 2
0 0 0
1 1 1
2 4 4
3 9 9
4 16 6
5 25 5
6 36 6
7 49 9
8 64 4
9 81 1

This table shows that the squares of all integers between 0 and 9, and therefore all integers, end in either 1, 4, 5, 6 or 9.

No perfect squares end in 3. Therefore, u(n) with n > 4 can never be a perfect square as it has been shown to always end in 3.

All that remains is to find u(n) for all integers of 4 or less:

Only u(1) and u(3) are perfect squares, and so they are the only sums of factorials to be perfect squares.