March 7, 2026

"As the categories have gotten, well, weirder, I’ve tried to create balance by not mixing tricky wordplay with hard trivia, so that there’s a path to a solution."

"If there’s a particularly hard-to-spot category, I might try to include a hint on the board. While cards are usually arranged to mislead the solver, sometimes the arrangement can be used to help, too. The category of 'Anagrams of Famous Painters' was tough, for example, so the top row of that board read 'EGADS SCRAMBLE ARTIST NAME' (EGADS is an anagram of 'Degas')...."

From "I Make Connections. Here’s What I’m Actually Thinking. The 1,000th Connections puzzle is out today. Wyna Liu, the writer behind the game, knows you have thoughts" (NYT)(gift link).

"I’ve... learned that some people hate when a word on the board is repeated in a category name. So I was honored when a friend showed me a post in the subreddit r/NYTConnections, with the heading 'In celebration of the single worst purple connections category ever …' A solver shared an image of what appeared to be a tattoo: a clam encircled by the words 'Things That Open Like a Clam.' (COMPACT, LAPTOP, WAFFLE IRON and … CLAM.)"

I think the problem is that a clam isn't like a clam. A clam's a clam. It was a great category, just named inaccurately.

Now, that I've got my "mollusks" tag on this post, I'm motivated to blog this other thing. I didn't even know about nudibranchs — lovely colorful mollusks — but I learned about them today when somebody at Metafilter linked to Wool Creature Lab a place that uses the craft of felting to make (to order) images of quite specific nudibranchs. They're beautiful, too beautiful to believe they are accurate images of real creatures. But the scientific name is listed with the felt item, and you can look it up and see photos of the living nudibranch. It's accurate.

17 comments:

baghdadbob said...

They should have gone with "bearded clam."

baghdadbob said...

Except bearded clam starts with a "B." Maybe "cervix" would have been a better choice.

Gerda Sprinchorn said...

The nudibranches are amazing. I'm surprised they aren't more popular. Camouflage is definitely not one of their survival strategies.

Mary Beth said...

Things that are hinged would have been a better description. The first two comments don't make any sense in regards to Connections. The first letter is irrelevant and I wouldn't consider a cervix to be hinged or to open like a clam.

Gerda Sprinchorn said...

Correction about nudibranch survival strategies: some nudibranches do use their bright colors as camouflage -- they mimic the color of the sponges they feed on. Most of them, however, appear to use their bright colors to advertise that they are poisonous or otherwise not a good thing to eat.

Fred Drinkwater said...

Not all nudibranchs are pretty. By example, a common driver's euphemism for post-cold-water-dive nasal ... uh ... drainage, is "nasalbranch".

Curious George said...

Clam might be problematic, but clamshell shouldn't be. That's what those containers that hinge are called. Like the new Big Arch! https://echoboomer.pt/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/big-arch-mcdonalds-destaque.jpg

RCOCEAN II said...

Clam up.
Cool as a clam.
Happy as a Clam.

Mollusks have no sayings.
But now we have a Mollusk we can talk about.

Char Char Binks, Esq. said...

Nothing is more like a clam than a clam

john mosby said...

Sort of like the Vicar of Dibley riddle:

What's brown and sticky?

A stick.

CC, JSM

tommyesq said...

Good to see that, I this time of war brought about by OrangeManBad, the Times can afford to waste our time on a stupid ap.

Wa St Blogger said...

I don't like it when they put in false connections in one puzzle to bait you and then use that same method at a real connection. Often there will be a phrase you can see or an obvious relationship, but then turns out that those are not used in the puzzle. But today they did exactly that. Put in an obvious relationship and it was not a red herring.

tim maguire said...

Nothing opens more like a clam than a clam.

It’s clever how often they have 3 words that have a clear connection but there is no fourth and none of the 3 go together, but I hate it when there are 4 words with a clearer connection than the official connections. That’s playing dirty.

Roger Sweeny said...

The original expression was "happy as a clam at high tide", because then the shore birds couldn't get at them.

TML said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
TML said...

I started doing the NYT Games thing because of you. I started with Spelling Bee and have been sucked in completely, only just recently thinking, "I'm done." Why? Because Sam Ezersky is a smug asshole and, frankly, Bee is now boring and way too repetitive. ADD THE F***ING "S" DANG IT! You can't say it's because of plurals if you allow -ED and -ING endings. The game is impoverished by the lack of the "S." I'm proud of my record, 950 total puzzles, 921 genii, 12 Queens, but I'm tired of the game and I blame that on the lack of "S." They've already used it twice, so it's not like there's some line that can't be crossed--you already crossed it! But I thank you for turning me on to Bee.

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