NYT Pips - Daily Domino Logic Puzzle
NYT Pips is a visual logic puzzle in which players place digital dominoes onto a grid to satisfy region-specific conditions. Each puzzle presents a fixed set of domino tiles and a board divided into regions, with symbols that define how pips (dots) must relate within those regions. The objective is to arrange all dominoes so every regional rule is met simultaneously.
Developed by The New York Times Games, Pips emphasizes pattern recognition and methodical reasoning rather than vocabulary. It offers daily puzzles across multiple difficulty levels, providing approachable entry points for new solvers and deeper challenges for experienced puzzle enthusiasts.
Each puzzle provides a set of dominoes and a gridded board divided into regions. Players drag tiles onto the grid, rotate as needed, and test placements against the regional conditions. A puzzle is solved when all tiles are placed and every rule is satisfied.
Regional symbols and meanings typically include: equal (all pips equal), not equal (no two pips equal), greater than and less than (pips must compare to a specified number), sum targets (pips add up to a given total), and empty regions (no added constraints). Because these rules interact across the grid, successful solving involves both local reasoning within regions and global planning across the entire board.
Feedback is immediate: incorrect configurations can be revised without penalty. Once all conditions are met, the game confirms completion, and results can be shared.
| Level | Typical Domino Count | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Easy | 4–5 | Introductory constraints with fewer tiles |
| Medium | Moderate | Balanced challenge and board coverage |
| Hard | Up to 16 | Dense boards with more interacting rules |
NYT Pips provides structured practice in logical reasoning, comparison, and basic arithmetic under clear, rule-based constraints. The daily cadence supports consistent problem-solving habits without time pressure, making it suitable for short sessions or deeper focus.
Practical applications include:
Because puzzles are handcrafted and rules vary by region, the experience remains diverse and repeatable, encouraging systematic thinking and careful experimentation.