NYT ‘Pips’ Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Tuesday, July 14
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.
- NYT Pips launched in late 2025 and has seen over 2 million daily players as of July 2026.
- Today's puzzle (July 14) features a 4x4 grid with 8 dominoes; the highest total pip count domino is the 6-5, yielding 11 pips.
- Forbes's guide, written by Erik Kain, provides step-by-step walkthroughs for each day's puzzle.
- The NYT Games subscription now includes five titles: Wordle, Connections, Strands, Pips, and Spelling Bee.
- Pips puzzles are generated algorithmically, ensuring a unique solution each day without repetition.
Frequently Asked Questions
NYT Pips is a daily domino-matching puzzle game released by The New York Times in late 2025. Players place dominoes on a grid so that adjacent halves match in pip counts, similar to Mahjong solitaire but with dominoes.
You are given a set of dominoes and a grid. Drag each domino onto the board so that each half touches another half with the same number of pips. All dominoes must fit perfectly in the grid with no gaps.
Forbes publishes daily hints and full walkthroughs for NYT Pips. Erik Kain writes the guide, which includes step-by-step solutions and tips for difficult puzzles.
NYT Pips is part of the NYT Games subscription, which costs about $40 per year. It is also accessible with a full NYT subscription. Some puzzles may be free for a limited time.
Wordle is a word-guessing game, while Pips is a visual-spatial puzzle with dominoes. Pips requires no vocabulary knowledge; it relies on pattern recognition and logic.
Yes, like other NYT games, Pips tracks your daily streaks and stats. You can see how many puzzles you've solved in a row and your overall win rate.
Topics
Original source
www.forbes.com
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