Word game enthusiasts had two fresh challenges to tackle this week: NYT Connections game #1096 on June 11 and Quordle game #1600 on June 12. Both puzzles, published by TechRadar, continue the daily tradition of testing vocabulary and lateral thinking.
NYT Connections, described by TechRadar as "the NYT's clever word game that challenges you to group answers in various categories," presents 16 words that must be sorted into four groups. According to TechRadar, the groups are colour-coded by difficulty: green is easy, yellow a little harder, blue often quite tough, and purple usually very difficult. Players can make up to four mistakes before losing.
NYT Connections #1096: Answers and Hints
TechRadar provided hints for each group. The yellow group hint was "Fitness sesion" (likely a typo for "session"), leading to the answer "PARTS OF A WORKOUT ROUTINE." The green hint was "All have something that rhymes with 'thorns'" – the group turned out to be "THINGS WITH HORNS." Blue was "Sound like a large vehicle" – actually homophones of SUVs. Purple was "Digital wallets" – the category "PAYMENT APPS MINUS A LETTER."
The final answers, as revealed by TechRadar, are:
| Group (Difficulty) | Category | Words |
|---|---|---|
| Yellow (Easy) | PARTS OF A WORKOUT ROUTINE | BALANCE, CARDIO, STRETCHING, WEIGHTS |
| Green (Easy) | THINGS WITH HORNS | BRASS BAND, DEVIL, RHINO, VIKING HELMET |
| Blue (Medium) | HOMOPHONES OF SUVS | BRONCHO, FORERUNNER, TROUPER, UCONN |
| Purple (Hard) | PAYMENT APPS MINUS A LETTER | ELLE, PAPAL, STRIP, VENO |
Author Johnny Dee rated the puzzle "Hard" and reported a "Fail" score. He noted he initially got the purple group on his second try, guessing “ELLE” for Zelle. He found “PARTS OF A WORKOUT ROUTINE” easy but struggled with “THINGS WITH HORNS” because he didn't think laterally about “BRASS BAND.”
Quordle #1600: Hints and Answers
Quordle, another word game, challenges players to solve four five-letter words simultaneously. TechRadar provided hints for game #1600: there are 5 different vowels (A, E, I, O, U); two answers contain repeated letters; one of the uncommon letters Q, Z, X, or J appears; and no answers start with the same letter. The starting letters given are T, S, J, and U.

The answers, according to TechRadar, are: TENTH, SHOAL, JELLY, UNIFY. The author noted that the game was tricky, and he made one wrong guess ("belly" instead of JELLY) and wasted time spelling SHOAL as "shaol."
Additionally, the Quordle Daily Sequence for game #1600 yielded words: DEMUR, AGAPE, BRINK, HAUTE.
The Appeal of Daily Word Games
TechRadar covers several daily word games, including Wordle, Strands, and Quordle. Johnny Dee, a freelance pop culture journalist, writes the NYT Connections and Quordle columns. The puzzles are free to play on the NYT Games site and other platforms, continuing the trend of bite-sized mental challenges that gained massive popularity with Wordle.
For enterprise technology leaders, these puzzles may serve as a brief mental reset or team-building activity. The underlying pattern-recognition and lateral thinking skills are also relevant to problem-solving in supply chain and logistics technology development.