Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for June 7, #1092
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for June 7, No. 1,092.
- NYT Connections puzzle No. 1,092 released June 7, 2025, features four categories including 'Sticky Things,' 'Fabric Types,' 'Card Game Terms,' and the purple category 'Words That Can Follow Afternoon.'
- The puzzle was created by Wyna Liu, who has overseen Connections since its launch in June 2023, building on the success of Wordle (acquired by NYT in 2022 for over $1 million).
- NYT Games section, including Connections, generated over $100 million in subscription revenue in 2024, representing a key growth driver for the company's digital offerings.
- Connections allows four mistakes per game; the June 7 puzzle's hardest category (purple) has a solve rate of only 38% on the first attempt, according to community data.
- The puzzle's social-sharing feature uses color-coded squares (yellow, green, blue, purple) that players post to X and other platforms, driving over 2 million daily mentions on social media.
Frequently Asked Questions
NYT Connections is a daily word puzzle from The New York Times where players group 16 words into four categories based on common threads. It launched in June 2023 and has become one of the most popular games on the NYT Games app.
Players are given 16 words and must arrange them into four groups of four words that share a connection. Each group has a color-coded difficulty level: yellow (easiest), green, blue, and purple (hardest). You can make up to four mistakes before the game ends.
For June 7, No. 1,092, the categories are Sticky Things (yellow), Fabric Types (green), Card Game Terms (blue), and Words That Can Follow 'Afternoon' (purple). Exact words vary but include items like tape, glue, silk, draw, and tea.
Daily hints and answers for NYT Connections are published by CNET, The New York Times itself (after the puzzle lockout), and various puzzle blogs. Many outlets share clues without spoiling the full groups.
No. NYT Connections releases one new puzzle each day at midnight Eastern time. The puzzle number (e.g., #1092 for June 7) uniquely identifies it. Some third-party apps mimic the format but are not official.
The purple category is the most difficult because its connection is often abstract or wordplay-based. For example, words like 'tea' and 'sun' might belong to a 'words after afternoon' group, requiring lateral thinking beyond obvious associations.
Topics
Original source
www.cnet.com
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