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Strands, the New York Timesโ still-in-beta word search game, is now on its 10th puzzle. The first two or three puzzles were relatively tame, with solvers complaining that the hint gave too much away and the game wasnโt very challenging. But you and I know better, right? As I pointed out last week, the puzzleโs creators have dropped hints that itโs going to get a lot trickier. Thatโs begun, and hoo boy, people are mad.ย
Before you read any further, know that this article includes spoilers and outright answers for the March 13, 2024 game of Strands. Here is the link to play todayโs game, so you can suffer along with the rest of us. Then come back and weโll discuss what you just experienced. (And if youโre catching up later, hereโs a fan-created archive where you can play the March 13 game even if you are reading this from the future.)ย
Strands #10 โOne thousand followersโ
Alright, friends. We need to discuss a few things about how the puzzles are constructed, and what expectations and assumptions are built in. This puzzle is new, so itโs okay if you havenโt figured everything out yet! Weโre learning together.ย
Think of the โthemeโ like a crossword clue
If you solve crosswords, especially NYT crosswords, youโll have a huge head start over everyone else when it comes to understanding tricky Strands themes. Remember, in Strands, โtodayโs themeโ is the clue you get when you open the page. I think of it as being the title of the puzzle.
Hereโs what you need to know: the theme is a clue for the spangram (the yellow word or phrase). The spangram, in turn, describes what the blue words have in common.
Sometimes the theme is a pretty straightforward clue: for example,ย
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โMark my wordsโ went with the spangram PUNCTUATION. (Blue words: COMMA, APOSTROPHEโฆ)
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โSheโll have a ballโ went with the spangram CINDERELLA. (Blue words: PUMPKIN, SLIPPERโฆ)
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โI gotta dip!โ went with the spangram GUACAMOLE. (Blue words: AVOCADO, JALAPENOโฆ)
Simple, right? Thatโs because theyโre starting us off easy. There have been some trickier ones:ย
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โTo put it mildlyโ was EUPHEMISMS.
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โRulerโs decreeโ was MEASUREMENTS. (Thatโs โrulerโ as in a yardstick, not a king)
Iโm convinced that this is a word search designed for crossword aficionados. Personally, Iโm here for it: I love NYT crosswords, especially ones like Thursdays and Sundays that are full of clever themes and wordplay. For example, here are some crossword clues that Iโve chuckled at in the past week:ย
This is whatโs going on when โOne thousand followersโ becomes GRAND FINALE, as in the March 13 Strands theme. A grand is one thousand, and a finale is an ending. The puzzle asks us to find endings for the phrase โGRAND ____.โ
Expect fill-in-the-blank categories
Now that weโre getting the hang of it, the blue words are sometimes wordplay based on the theme/spangram. Just as in Connections, words arenโt always grouped together for being members of a category or synonyms for each other. Weโve seen all kinds of tricky combinations there, including homophones and anagrams. (Remember ATE, FOR, TOO, WON as homophones of the numbers 8, 4, 2, 1?)
So what kind of wordplay can we expect in Strands? (Fortunately, anagrams wonโt really work.) Recall that the NYT hinted we might see โfill-in-the-blanksโ someday. Thatโs happened twice already. Just a few days ago, we had this puzzle:ย
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Theme: โFRAGILE: Handle with careโย
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Spangram: BREAKABLE
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Words: HEART, SILENCE, PROMISE, BREAD, MOLD, SWEAT, RECORD.
Get it? They all refer to idioms where we โbreakโ something: you can break bread with somebody, or break their heart, or you can sound like a broken record.ย
The reason March 13โs puzzle is so tricky is that it uses both a crossword-style clue for the spangram, and Connections-style fill-in-the-blanks for the blue words. Iโm going to spoil it all here, since you were already warned:ย
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Theme: โOne thousand followersโย
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Spangram: GRAND FINALE
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Words: [grand] PRIZE, [grand] JURY, [Grand] CENTRAL, [Grand] CANYON, [grand] SLAM, [Grand] RAPIDS, [grand] PIANO.
Get it? Get it??? Iโm sorry, I was tickled by this once I figured it out. It also took me a good long while to get it, because this is a tough puzzle! It takes a few leaps of logic to get those โaha!โ moments.
Anyway, people who were expecting a simple word search are mad. Hereโs a Reddit thread full of complaints that the spangram doesnโt match the theme, or that โfinaleโ should have been a word on its own. (It could have been, but then you donโt get the cute construction of GRAND + [synonym for ending].)ย
Many of the complaints on this and other hard puzzles are from people who arenโt native English speakers, and thatโs a totally valid criticism. (Lots of folks were stumped by GADZOOKS the other dayโyou kind of had to read a certain era of comic books for that to even register as a word.) Hard word puzzles are not always accessible to everyone, which is both a problem and the whole point of the puzzle. If you solve something by reaching into your brain for some obscure knowledge or by connecting two concepts in an outside-the-box kind of way, thatโs an amazing feeling, and makes the whole puzzle worth it!
Iโm impressed with Strands (and have high hopes for it graduating from beta) because it can run that whole gamut from easy to devilish, depending on how sadistic the constructor is feeling that day. Getting the โahaโ moment on a tricky one is the kind of thrill I live for (I donโt live a very exciting life). Bottom line: This is not an easy puzzle. If you know and love the wordplay tricks of both Crosswords and Connections, youโll be into Strands. Just donโt expect it to be easy.
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