NYT Connections Puzzle Traps Players, This Bird-Sound Twist Turns the Last Group Into a Fall

Author: Qoo Media

The June 25 edition of NYT Connections looked straightforward at first glance, but puzzle #1110 quickly proved that several of its most obvious matches were designed to mislead. Many players could clear three groups before the final four words exposed the real trap.

The hardest category centered on a phonetic trick rather than a direct meaning. Instead of naming birds outright, the purple group relied on words that begin with bird homophones, which made the final connection much harder to spot.

Why this puzzle felt harder than it looked

Connections asks players to sort 16 words into four groups of four, with each group tied together by theme, function, meaning, or wordplay. The game uses a color-based difficulty scale, moving from yellow to green, blue, and then purple.

That structure is part of what made this puzzle so deceptive. Words such as LEAD, MERCURY, MONITOR, and PRINTER appeared to fit familiar categories, but the full grid contained overlaps that pushed many players toward the wrong combinations.

The clue pattern behind the groups

The yellow clue was “PC extras,” pointing to common computer add-ons. The green clue, “Crunched up,” pointed to items that are tightly packed or compressed.

The blue clue, “Toxic materials,” pointed to hazardous elemental metals. The purple clue, “Avian starters,” hid the hardest trick of all through sound, not spelling.

Here are the four groups from puzzle #1110:

Category Words
Computer Peripherals MICROPHONE, MONITOR, PRINTER, TRACKPAD
Tightly Packed COMPACT, COMPRESSED, DENSE, SQUASHED
Hazardous Elemental Metals FRANCIUM, LEAD, MERCURY, POLONIUM
Starting With Bird Homophones CRANIUM, CROQUETTE, DUCTILE, HOCKEY

The purple set drew the most attention because its connection depended on pronunciation rather than obvious category logic. CRANIUM, CROQUETTE, DUCTILE, and HOCKEY all begin with sounds that resemble bird names, which is exactly the kind of twist that can break a promising streak.

How players usually approach a grid like this

Connections allows four mistakes before the game ends, so cautious sorting matters once a grid begins to look crowded. A common strategy is to lock in the clearest group first, then separate terms that can fit more than one theme.

On this puzzle, scientific terms and everyday device names sat close together, which increased the chance of confusion. The shuffle feature can help in cases like this because a new layout sometimes makes a hidden pattern easier to see.

NYT Connections continues to grow in popularity alongside other New York Times games such as Wordle, Spelling Bee, and The Mini Crossword. Its appeal comes from the way it blends vocabulary, pop culture, science, and wordplay into a short daily challenge.

Compared with the June 24 puzzle, #1109, this edition drew more complaints because the previous day’s categories were easier to identify. The earlier puzzle included PROG BANDS, CLASSIC WEDDING GIFTS, RED CHARACTERS, and RHYMING COMPOUND WORDS, which many players found more direct.

That contrast helped define the June 25 game: familiar-looking words, layered traps, and one especially tricky purple category that rewarded players only after they stopped trusting the most obvious reading of the grid.

Source: sundayguardianlive.com
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