The NY Times game Connections could become as popular as Wordle


Move over, Wordle! There’s a new daily game for us to obsess about. After testing it out in beta over the last two months, the New York Times’ new word association game, Connections, will officially join the rotation. Connections has never been formally announced or promoted before now, but it spread through word of mouth and social media. There’s even speculation about whether or not it will become as big of a cultural phenomenon as Wordle was/is.

The New York Times found instant success with Wordle. Now it might have a new hit on its hands.

A new puzzle called Connections is officially joining the newspaper’s portfolio of games this week, following a successful summer testing phase where it became the Times’ second-most played game behind Wordle despite minimal promotion. Players will see Connections appear in the Times’ Games app and in the news app under the Play tab beginning this week.

Connections, which also can be played on desktop and mobile web, is a word association game that presents players with 16 words and challenges them to group them together in four different topics. Players have four chances to solve the puzzle before losing.

Jonathan Knight, head of Games at the Times, told CNN that Connections has been in development for a year, with the games team concocting the idea at a “Game Jam” (think: a hackathon, but for games). After some fine tuning of the idea, Connections launched in beta in June with the puzzle only being findable via search or in the menu of other games

It was an instant hit, with millions of people playing it weekly, Knight said. Connections is “very approachable, and it’s very easy to understand.” The puzzle is also one of the Times’ “most editorially driven games” with the Connections’ editor purposely thinking of clever words that might appear to be grouped together but actually aren’t related.

“It’s that human-made component with the puzzle-constructor going up against them everyday and trying to outwit them as they try to outwit you,” Knight said. “I think that is kind of magic.”

Players won’t see any changes to Connections once it leaves beta on Monday, a sign that it “resonated with people right away,” Knight said. The only tweak the Times made to the game was clarifying the instructions during the two-month beta period.

[From CNN]

I started playing Connections sometime during 4th of July week after seeing some friends on Twitter X posting their embedded results. Wordle (and all of its variants) will always have my heart, but I really enjoy playing Connections. I find it more challenging because it makes me think in a different way than I usually do when playing these types of games. I’ve only not gotten Wordle a handful of times over the last 18 months (#humblebrag), but I consistently do not get all four Connections at least twice a week. Is anyone else playing and finding it challenging? I’ve also gotten into Cryptic Crossword puzzles over the last year or so, which I love, but find really tough.

Anyway, do I think that Connections will overtake Wordle? Probably not. There was something really fun and special about that OG Wordle magic back in late 2021/early 2022 when it blew up. It brought friends, family, and social media acquaintances together! I don’t think anything’s going to dethrone the Beatles of web-based word games anytime soon. My prediction is that Connections will end up being the Olivia Rodriguez to Wordle’s Taylor Swift, and I 100% mean that as a compliment.

Photos credit: Ghen Mar Cuano and Bruce Mars on Unsplash, Cottonbro studios on Pexels

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30 Responses to “The NY Times game Connections could become as popular as Wordle”

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  1. Barb Mill says:

    I got tired of wordle several months ago. Perhaps I was getting tired of seeing everyone posting daily on social media. I am loving connections.

    • Normades says:

      I hate when people post their wordle or connections results. Like I so don’t give a shirt.

  2. Caroline says:

    I love Connections! It feels challenging and I am surprised at how invested I am to get them all correct.

  3. FHMom says:

    I’m going to try that. The Times mini puzzle is free, in case anyone is interested. Also try Quordle. It’s more challenging than Wordle but the same concept.

    • Nick G says:

      Love quordle and Octordle! I feel its actually easier because you have more feedback than Wordle, with more tries.

  4. Jenn says:

    Hmm! This game is perilously similar to one of my favorite word games, “Red Herring”—except that, in that game, there are four words left over at the end. (I take them at their word that the game was conceived and developed during a game jam. It’s just familiar, is all, which I guess is a strength.)

  5. Jan90067 says:

    I found Connections when it first started, and I LOVE it. And yes, Rosie, it *does* make you think in less obvious ways the words connect! I feel *really* good when I get it all correct! More times than I care to admit, I’ll get one or two rows, but not the rest; sometimes, I don’t get ANY of it. And when I see the answers, I’m like “Huh… ok.. I can see it” or “WTH??” lol.

    Still, I play it every day, along with Spelling Bee and Wordle! (And yes, Wordle seems to have gotten an easier the past few months!)

  6. OriginalMich says:

    I’ve played twice and lost both times 🙁

  7. helonearth says:

    If you like it, watch Only Connect – a BBC show that has been on since 2008 and has the wall as one of their quiz questions. If you find the wall difficult, the rest of the show will really blow your mind!

    • Lisa says:

      It’s an only connect rip off and that is much harder!

    • BettyD says:

      This! I’m glad people are enjoying it, but I have been like “this is just the final board from Only Connect, right?” and no one where I am knows what I’m talking about.

  8. Shells_Bells says:

    I Wordle, Dordle, Quordle & Octordle every day and recently added Connections to my line up and I like that my brain has to think a different way. Highly recommend.

    • JanetDR says:

      I wordle and waffle (semi filled in crossword style), then I worldle and globle both geographic games. The first with 6 guesses and the second with unlimited. Going to check out connections!

  9. FancyCatsup says:

    Today’s Connections was very hard! I like them both though.

  10. Plums says:

    Instant sideeye to this article from the opening sentence, implying that the NYT ingeniously created wordle rather than bought it after it was already a viral phenomenon for months.

    • ama1977 says:

      Lol, MTE!! I was playing Wordle WAY before the NYT bought it. I introduced it to all of my family way back when!

      I tried Connections and I don’t like it. I do like Letter Boxed though, and play it in the evening (Wordle is usually a morning game, and my mom, dad, and sister and I text each other our results. My husband and I also text results to each other, and my dad and my husband do too, which I think is adorable.) Connections just makes me mad. They are not going to capture Wordle-style lightning in a bottle “again” because they didn’t do it the first time, they just bought a person’s (fantastic) idea.

    • North of Boston says:

      Exactly!

      “The New York Times found instant success with Wordle”

      I was like, “no shit, because they bought it from the creator after it was already a massive success”.

      I’ve also been irritated with them lately because at some point they introduced an ad landing page between clicking to play Wordle and actually getting to the game. Just no.

  11. Teddy says:

    I’ve been dabbling in Connections for about a month now. Also have a few fails per week. Not really a fan because it often comes down to your personal zone of trivia or pop culture knowledge.

    Agree won’t overtake wordle. They’re just using that to hype the rollout. My fave is still Spelling Bee.

  12. mellie says:

    I love Wordle and it’s rare that I don’t solve it…but Connections, whew, sometimes my brain is just not working the right way and I don’t get it solved. Can’t even get more than one row! I love it though.

  13. QuiteContrary says:

    I play Connections now, too, and it is a challenge. The game I loathe (but still feel compelled to play) is Letterboxed. It’s so annoying and yet I have to play it, along with Spelling Bee, Wordle, the Mini Crossword and Connections. It’s part of my nighttime routine.

  14. Suze says:

    I just tried Connections for the first time today. It’s fun, and I can see how it could be really challenging. I mean, when I first looked at the words I had no freakin’ idea how I was going to make four groups out of them. So yeah, I’ll keep trying it out.

    I do still love Wordle though. My sister is living in Vietnam right now, and our daily exchange of Wordle scores helps us keep in touch.

  15. Lightpurple says:

    I have been playing Connections for months and love it. I’m still blown away by the day that all of the word choices were just 2 letters, like FE, LA and I got them all correct

    • Rosie says:

      I felt the same about the one yesterday with all of the “animals that end with X.” I picked it as a “F it” guess with one chance left and still two Connections to make. Was shocked when it was correct lol.

  16. Whatever says:

    My husband and I both play Connections and Wordle every day. He almost never makes a mistake with Connections. I don’t know how the heck he does it. I get it almost every day, and I’m getting better at getting them all the first time. I feel like after a while you start to understand the thought process behind the people pouring it together, and that makes them easier to get.

    • The Old Chick says:

      I just played connections for the first time. Today’s game had words in contexts that I didn’t know. I won’t say because it gives it away. But it seemed American specific. I completed 2 of 4 and even seeing the answers I had no idea what some of the others were. It was fun though.

      I’ve missed wordle 2x in 18 months. I love playing it.

  17. Concern Fae says:

    I have the NYTimes games subscription now. Trying to decide if I’m going to renew. I tend towards being a completist, and what was just a daily crossword has turned into a time suck.

    Part of Wordle’s long term success is that it has stayed free. Is Connections inside or outside the paywall. I’m going to humblebrag that I only miss on it every other week or so. One of the things I like about it is that it’s something that google can’t really help with. How I got my success rate up was to leave a category behind and start with a new set of words if I missed a match.

    • North of Boston says:

      I’ve got an online NYT subscriptions but not the games subscription, and it’s been accessible.

      I wish you could actually fully play Spelling Bee, but it only lets you score so high before it bounces you, so if you get 10 or so words, you’re done for the day.

  18. nocturne says:

    I gave up on wordle pretty quickly, BUT it did help me find similar games I actually like. These are all by the same creator – so click on one and it should lead you to the rest.

    WorLdle – puts up the outline of a country and you have to guess what country it is – given some clues along the way – direction to where the country is compared to your guess, physical distance, and percentage of how close you are – my knowledge of geography has improved dramatically!

    Statele – similar to above but with US states.

    Flagle – a world flag is divided up into six square, one is revealed every guess – with similar added clues

    Where Taken World – thew show you a photo and you have to guess where in the world it was taken – given similar clues

    Where Taken USA – similar to above

    Angle – they show you an angle and you have to guess what it is – tells you whether you are getting closer with your choices