Need answers to the New York Times Connect puzzle? To me, Wordle is more like a vocabulary test, while Connections is more like brain teasers. You are given 16 words and asked to sort them into four groups that are related to each other in some way. Sometimes they’re obvious, but game editor Wyna Liu knows how to trick you with single words that fit multiple groups. Read on for today’s linking tips and answers.
Want more gaming answers? This is today’s answer to Wordle and this is the answer to Strands. Can you solve the New York Times mini crossword puzzle? Here’s today’s answer.
read more: NYT Connections Could Be the New Wordle: Our Tips and Tricks
Today’s link group tip
Here are four tips for connecting the groups in today’s puzzle, from the easiest yellow group to the difficult (and sometimes weird) purple group.
Yellow group tips: Talk about something.
Green group tips: What does a baseball pitcher do.
Blue group tips: Inside a Barnes & Noble bookstore.
Purple group tips: Not shoes, but…
Answers to today’s link group
Yellow group: promote.
Green group: leave
Blue group: Bookstore section.
Purple group: sock.
read more: Wordle Cheat Sheet: Here are the most commonly used letters in English words
What’s the answer to today’s link?
Yellow words in today’s connection
The theme is propaganda. The four answers are hype, marketing, promotion and sales.
Green words in today’s link
The theme is throwing. The four answers are throw, chuck, throw, and throw.
Blue words in today’s connection
The theme is the bookstore section. The four answers were fiction, humor, romance and travel.
Purple words in today’s connection
The theme is socks. The four answers are ankle, crew, sweat, and tube.
How to play connect
It’s easy to play. Winning is hard. Look at these 16 words and mentally assign them to the four relevant groups. Click on the four words that you think go together. The groups are color-coded, but you don’t know what’s going where until you see the answer. The yellow group is the easiest, then the green group, then the blue group, and the purple group is the hardest. Look carefully at the words and think about related terms. Sometimes the connection is only with part of the word. At one time, the four words were grouped because each started with the name of a rock band, including “Rushmore” and “Journeyman.”