The Saturday edition of NYT Connections arrives with puzzle #1063, serving up a grid that rewards TV vocabulary, accessory awareness, and knot-tying knowledge. Today's challenge particularly favors binge-watchers and anyone who's ever fumbled with a lanyard. Add as a preferred source on Google What Makes Connections Tick For newcomers, NYT Connections presents 16 words that must be sorted into four thematic groups of four. The twist? Each word could belong to multiple categories, but only one arrangement is correct. You're limited to four mistakes, and the color-coded difficulty system (yellow being easiest, purple being trickiest) means surface-level connections often mislead. Since its June 2023 launch, Connections has carved out its niche in the Times' puzzle ecosystem, standing alongside Wordle and the crossword as a daily ritual for millions of players worldwide. The game's genius lies in its red herrings, words that could fit multiple categories but belong in only one. Today's Grid at a Glance Here are the 16 words staring back at you in puzzle #1063: PUFF | EPISODE | TIE | SHOELACES PERIOD | CHAIN | SEASON | THINK LANYARD | FRIENDSHIP BRACELET | CONVERSATION | SERIES QUIPU | BOA | FRANCHISE | MACRAMÉ A seemingly random collection that somehow connects into four perfect categories. Strategic Hints (No Spoilers Yet) Yellow Category Nudge: Think about what you watch on streaming platforms, from individual installments to entire sagas. Green Category Clue: These items all sit above the collarbone, whether for fashion, function, or flair. Blue Category Hint: These all involve lengths of material woven, knotted, or laced together. Purple Category Teaser: Each of these words can follow a common four-letter word to form a familiar phrase. Click to expand The Full Solutions Last chance to solve independently: answers below --- --- --- --- --- Yellow (Units of TV Programs): EPISODE, FRANCHISE, SEASON, SERIES The easiest category tonight for anyone who's ever scrolled Netflix. These are the building blocks of television: an episode is one installment, a season collects many, a series is the whole show, and a franchise spans multiple series or spin-offs. Straightforward synonyms that fall into place quickly. Green (Things Worn Around the Neck): BOA, CHAIN, LANYARD, TIE This one separates the accessory-aware from the rest. A boa is a feathered neck wrap, a chain is jewelry, a lanyard holds ID badges, and a tie is formalwear. No tricky double meanings here, these all sit comfortably above the shoulders. Blue (Strings Tied in Knots): FRIENDSHIP BRACELET, MACRAMÉ, QUIPU, SHOELACES The medium-difficulty category rewards crafty solvers. Friendship bracelets are knotted strings exchanged as gifts, macramé is the art of knotting cord into decorative patterns, quipu is the ancient Incan system of knotted cords used for record-keeping, and shoelaces are tied into bows daily. The through line is literal knotting, each item depends on tying. Purple (___ Piece): CONVERSATION, PERIOD, PUFF, THINK The trickiest category demands lateral thinking. Each word combines with "piece" to form a common compound: conversation piece (a topic or object that sparks discussion), period piece (a work set in a specific historical era), puff piece (a flattering, often uncritical article), and think piece (a reflective, analytical essay). If you were looking for a surface-level connection among these four, you weren't going to find it. Click to expand The Verdict Puzzle #1063 registers as moderate difficulty with a sting in the tail. Yellow falls quickly for anyone who recognizes television terminology, while green requires thinking about what you put around your neck. Blue separates the crafters from the casual observers. Purple, predictably, is the streak-ender, that "piece" suffix trick won't reveal itself without serious lateral thinking. The real trap here is puff , which could easily read as something worn (a puff scarf or puff necklace) or a TV segment ("puff piece" as journalism, wait, that's actually the purple category). And chain could mislead toward TV franchises or connected series, but it belongs around your neck instead. Reset and Repeat Tomorrow's puzzle drops at midnight in your timezone. Until then, reflect on today's performance: Did the knot-tying category trip you up, or did the "piece" suffix pattern reveal itself before the final guess? The beauty lies not in perfection but in training your brain to spot these hidden patterns. For now, puzzle #1063 is solved. See you at midnight for round #1064. Add as a preferred source on Google
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