Connections Answers — May 29, 2026

    The four groups and answers for this day’s Connections puzzle.

    Connections Puzzle

    Friday, May 29, 2026 - Puzzle #1164

    Today's Words

    POWDER
    FATHER
    READING
    ATLANTIC
    PENNSYLVANIA
    BILLIARD
    PACIFIC
    BO
    AMMONIA
    PROTACTINIUM
    WET DOG
    DRAWING
    SOUTHERN
    DURIAN
    PUBLIC ADDRESS
    ARCTIC

    Solution

    OCEANS

    ARCTICATLANTICPACIFICSOUTHERN

    OCEANS

    SOURCES OF DISTINCTIVE SMELLS

    AMMONIABODURIANWET DOG

    SOURCES OF DISTINCTIVE SMELLS

    KINDS OF ROOMS IN A MANSION

    BILLIARDDRAWINGPOWDERREADING

    KINDS OF ROOMS IN A MANSION

    WHAT "PA" MIGHT REFER TO

    FATHERPENNSYLVANIAPROTACTINIUMPUBLIC ADDRESS

    WHAT "PA" MIGHT REFER TO

    How It Works

    Connections challenges you to find relationships between words. Our tool helps you identify patterns and common themes to solve the puzzle.

    Game Rules

    In Connections, you need to:

    • Group 16 words into 4 sets of 4 related words
    • Identify the common theme or connection for each group
    • Solve the puzzle without making more than 4 mistakes

    Groups are color-coded by difficulty:

    Yellow (Straightforward)
    Green
    Blue
    Purple (Tricky)

    We use AI to identify the word groups and their connections, making it easier for you to solve the daily puzzle.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What do the colors mean in NYT Connections?

    The colors represent difficulty levels. Yellow is the easiest and most straightforward category. Green is slightly harder. Blue is more challenging. Purple is the trickiest category, often involving wordplay, puns, or obscure connections.

    How many mistakes can you make in Connections?

    You can make up to 4 mistakes in Connections before the game ends. Each incorrect guess of 4 words costs you one mistake. The game tracks your mistakes at the bottom of the puzzle.

    How do I play NYT Connections?

    Select 4 words that share something in common and submit them as a group. If correct, they'll be removed and the category revealed. Continue until you've found all 4 groups or run out of mistakes. Start with the most obvious connections first.

    Is there a new Connections puzzle every day?

    Yes, the New York Times releases a new Connections puzzle every day at midnight Eastern Time. Each puzzle has a unique number and set of 16 words to group.

    What's the best strategy for Connections?

    Start by looking for obvious categories first (often yellow). Look for words that could fit multiple categories and save them for later. Watch for wordplay and double meanings, especially in purple. If stuck, try eliminating what definitely doesn't go together.

    Connections strategy & tips

    What the four colors actually mean

    Every Connections puzzle sorts its 16 words into four groups of four, color-coded by difficulty: yellow is the easiest and most literal, green is a step trickier, blue is harder still, and purple is the most devious — usually built on wordplay, hidden words, or a twist you only see in hindsight.

    The colors are a difficulty ranking, not a hint about content. Knowing the order matters because the puzzle is designed so the “obvious” grouping is often a decoy that steals a word from a harder category.

    Solve the overlaps, not the easy words

    The single biggest skill in Connections is resisting the first grouping you see. Setters deliberately include words that fit two categories — a word that looks yellow but actually belongs to purple. If you submit the easy-looking four, you often burn a mistake.

    A better method: find the words that could belong to multiple groups and hold them aside. Build the group you’re most certain of from the words that fit nowhere else, and only then place the ambiguous words into whatever category still needs them.

    Category archetypes worth recognizing

    Connections reuses a handful of category shapes. Spotting the shape tells you what kind of link to look for:

    • “___ + word” or “word + ___” — four words that each precede or follow a common word (e.g. SUN, MOON, STAR, DAY all + LIGHT).
    • Synonyms for one concept — four loose synonyms (ways to say “fast,” “angry,” etc.).
    • Members of a set — types of a category (breeds, currencies, chess pieces).
    • Hidden words / anagrams — words that contain a smaller word, or rearrange into something (the classic purple).
    • Homophones or “sounds like” — words linked by sound, not meaning.

    Respect the purple group

    Purple is almost always wordplay rather than meaning. If three groups feel like “categories of things” and four words are left that seem unrelated, the link is probably structural — they each hide a body part, end in a silent letter, or are anagrams of planets.

    A useful tactic: once you’ve confidently solved two groups, look at the eight remaining words specifically for a wordplay pattern rather than a topic. The purple connection is usually hiding in plain sight.

    Guess order protects your four mistakes

    You get four mistakes before the game ends, so treat them as a budget. Lead with your highest-confidence group — ideally one where all four words fit nowhere else. Each correct group removes four words and shrinks the ambiguity for the rest.

    If you’re torn between two groupings, submit the one whose four words you can’t imagine fitting any other category. Never spend a mistake on a guess you already suspect is a trap.

    How players usually lose

    • Submitting the obvious yellow-looking four before checking which words the harder groups need.
    • Ignoring purple until the end, then having no mistakes left to experiment with.
    • Locking onto a theme too early and forcing a fourth word that doesn’t really fit.
    • Forgetting that one word is usually a deliberate decoy shared between two groups.

    A new Connections drops every day at midnight Eastern, and everyone gets the same 16 words — so the edge comes from method, not memorized answers.