

Best years group highlights peak life stages, using HEYDAY, PINNACLE, PRIME, ZENITH.
Text formatting actions include BOLD, HIGHLIGHT, STRIKETHROUGH, and UNDERLINE, emphasizing digital writing skills.
Colorful objects and accessory endings create visual and wordplay challenges for clever grouping.
Friday’s NYT Connections puzzle blends colorful imagery, wordplay, and clever misdirections. The participants are required to connect the words into the most excellent years, the actions of text formatting, the objects with colors, and the words that end with accessories. The grid of today provides a combination of clear associations and fine misdirections, which is a challenge for the solvers to stay alert.
NYT Connections is a daily word game in which players have to sort 16 words into four groups of four. The players have to identify the common theme shared by each group. If the players guess a total of three times wrong, the game ends with the fourth guess.
The game is a great test of logic, vocabulary, and cultural knowledge, offering a mental challenge that is pleasingly difficult for everyone. New players can get the game through the NYT's website or Games app, while subscribers can also play old ones, as there is an archive.
BAYWATCH, HIGHLIGHT, RAINBOW, HERRING, PRIME, SUNSET, BOLD, PEACOCK, COOTIE, HEYDAY, KALEIDOSCOPE, UNDERLINE, ZENITH, KINGPIN, STRIKETHROUGH, PINNACLE
Yellow Group – Hopefully, this is yet to come for you
One-word hint: Best
Green Group – Make symbols stand out or make them irrelevant
One-word hint: Text
Blue Group – Like tropical plants, swatch wheels, and Dali’s work
One-word hint: Colorful
Purple Group – Right about that style advice!
One-word hint: Accessories
Yellow: Best
Green: Text
Blue: Colorful
Purple: Accessories
Yellow Group – Best Years
HEYDAY, PINNACLE, PRIME, ZENITH
Green Group – Things You Can Do to Text
BOLD, HIGHLIGHT, STRIKETHROUGH, UNDERLINE
Blue Group – Things Known for Being Colorful Things
KALEIDOSCOPE, PEACOCK, RAINBOW, SUNSET
Purple Group – Ending in Accessories
BAYWATCH, COOTIE, HERRING, KINGPIN
The puzzle is a catchy mix of wordplay and familiar ideas. The yellow parts indicate the best times of life or simply "best years," and the green brings out the actions of text formatting that are usually applied in digital writing. The blue groups display vivid objects such as PEACOCK and KALEIDOSCOPE, forming a connection that is visually thematic.
The purple words are all with the "-tie" ending, adding a twist to the accessories theme, as they are related to dress. There are subtle distractions, such as HERRING and UNDERLINE, which require the players to pay attention to the patterns instead of the surface meanings. The puzzle becomes both difficult and rewarding at the same time.
The NYT Connections puzzle on October 24 is a fascinating example of visual and linguistic creativity. Colored objects, accessory endings, peak life terms, and formatting actions require sharp observation, lateral thinking, and pattern recognition, as the puzzle is just like that. The j week can be concluded very well with a challenge that combines intuition, humor, and strategy, and is very satisfying.