

The puzzle blends movie themes, radio terms, and rating words for a balanced challenge.
The ’90s action film group creates the strongest twist with clear nostalgia.
Several words overlap in tone and theme, adding subtle misdirection without overwhelming difficulty.
Today's NYT Connections puzzle is an excellent medley that incorporates rating terms, radio tuning language, different styles of films, and popular classic action titles from the 1990s. The grid for November 14 not only evokes nostalgia but also presents challenges in logic, and the purple group is the dramatic twist that is most attractive.
Themes are mingling so closely that they actually confuse, and a few words are also roaming around the categories before settling into the right groups. This scenario makes today's NYT Connections not only clever but also very satisfying for puzzle lovers from novice to expert.
NYT Connections tasks players with sorting 16 words into four hidden groups. Each group contains four terms linked by meaning or theme. Colors reveal difficulty: yellow for simple categories, green for moderate themes, blue for challenging cultural references, and purple for the most complex wordplay or niche topics. Mistakes are limited, which keeps the challenge tight and engaging. This format explains why NYT Connections remains one of the most popular daily word games today.
BUDDY, FREQUENCY, HEAT, RATE, SPEED, JUDGE, DISASTER, BAND, ARMAGEDDON, GRADE, SUPERHERO, STATION, MARTIAL ARTS, CHANNEL, HARD BOILED, REVIEW
Yellow Group - assess
Green Group - find something between the static
Blue Group - many flavors of action-packed cinema
Purple Group - ’90s films with explosive reputations
Yellow Group - Evaluate
Green Group - Radio
Blue Group - Subgenres
Purple Group - Classics
Yellow Group - evaluate: GRADE, JUDGE, RATE, REVIEW
Green Group - radio tuning options: BAND, CHANNEL, FREQUENCY, STATION
Blue Group - action film subgenres: BUDDY, DISASTER, MARTIAL ARTS, SUPERHERO
Purple Group - classic ’90s action films: ARMAGEDDON, HARD BOILED, HEAT, SPEED
This puzzle emphasizes entertainment topics but maintains a clear framework. The blue group shows a playful variety of movie subgenres, but the purple group's attention-grabbers are iconic '90s titles. The yellow section is the first one for most solvers because of its easy evaluation terms.
The green set is notable for its use of simple radio vocabulary. Even though the layout is balanced, some words are so close in meaning that one could think of moving them between categories, which is the right amount of pressure to cause second thoughts.
The November 14 edition of NYT Connections strikes a clean balance between media references and simple definitions. Familiar action films bring a wave of nostalgia, while the radio group adds a refreshing, old-school contrast. The layout is easier than the puzzles presented earlier this week, but the combination of themes still maintains the fun factor. It’s an attractive and neat grid that merges simplicity with allure, giving a wonderful finale to the week’s batch of NYT Connections suggestions and contests.