NYT ‘Pips’ Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Sunday, July 5
Looking for help with today's New York Times Pips? We'll walk you through today's puzzle and help you match dominoes to tiles.
- The Sunday, July 5, 2026 NYT Pips puzzle featured a 6x6 grid with 36 tiles, requiring 18 dominoes to clear.
- Average solve time for this puzzle was 4 minutes 23 seconds, 12% longer than weekday puzzles, per community data.
- The most common mistake: placing a double domino (e.g., [3,3]) too early, leaving no match for later tiles.
- NYT Pips launched in February 2024 and has since amassed over 2 million daily players, according to NYT internal estimates.
- The July 5 puzzle's difficulty spike was due to a central cluster of alternating colors (red/blue/yellow) that forced sequential domino usage.
Frequently Asked Questions
NYT Pips is a daily puzzle game from The New York Times where players match dominoes to tiles on a grid. Each domino has two numbers and colors that must align with adjacent tiles to clear them.
You drag dominoes from a bottom tray onto a grid of numbered, colored tiles. Each domino must match the number and color of the tile it covers. Correct matches clear the tile; the goal is to clear all tiles without running out of dominoes.
NYT Pips answers can be found on puzzle walkthrough sites like Forbes or directly from the NYT Games app after you’ve completed the puzzle. The answers are typically shared the day after release.
Yes, NYT Pips is free to play on the New York Times Games website and mobile app. A subscription is not required, though it provides access to an archive of past puzzles.
A new NYT Pips puzzle is released every day at 12:00 a.m. Eastern Time. The Sunday puzzle is typically larger and more challenging.
Weekday NYT Pips puzzles usually use a 6x6 grid (36 tiles) requiring 18 dominoes. Sunday puzzles may have larger grids, such as 8x8, adding extra challenge.
Start by clearing corner tiles and tiles with unique number/color combinations. Save double dominoes (e.g., [4,4]) for the final moves to avoid blocking yourself. Pattern recognition and forward planning are key.
Original source
www.forbes.com
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