
15

Horse Magnifier

Welcome To The Garden

Stick Hero RPG

Astro Tycoon

Christmas Factory

Wacky Steps

Wave Rider

Fireboy and Watergirl

TB World

FNAF Help Wanted 2

Yume Nikki

2048 Rogue

Turnip Boy Robs a Bank

Sprunki Angler Durple

Dead Strike

Sprunki

Sprunki Retake
Sprunki Phase 5

Escape Tsunami Brainrots Online

Wave Rider

Bottle Hop

Ragdoll Flip

Geometry Dash

Sprunki Wenda Treatment

Sprunki Phase 3
Sprunki Phase 4

Subway Surfers

Sprunki 2026

Sprunked

Sprunki Phase 6

Sprunki Angler Durple

Sprunki Phase 9

Sprunki OC Real

LoveMoney

Sprunki Savior Treatment
Sprunki Phase 1

Sprunki Infected

Sprunki Dandy's World

Escape Road
Pips NYT is the newest puzzle from The New York Times, and it swaps letters for numbers in a way that feels instantly fun. The game, which was inspired by dominoes, tests your ability to fill a board with tiles while adhering to ingenious rules. It's easy to learn, but it soon turns into a challenge of perseverance and reasoning, making each puzzle feel worthwhile.

The goal in Pips NYT is to cover the board with digital dominoes using drag-and-drop controls. Both desktop and mobile devices make it simple to move and rotate tiles, which expedites and simplifies experimentation. Each region of the board comes with its own rules: some spaces want equal numbers, others need them to be different, and certain areas require higher, lower, or summed values. The puzzle is solved only when every condition is met, so expect a bit of trial and error before it clicks.
The fun of Pips NYT comes from the “aha” moment. You’ll place a few tiles without thinking, then pause when things get tricky. Rotating a domino and suddenly realizing it fits is strangely satisfying. With no timer or pressure, the challenge feels laid-back but concentrated. It's simple to lose track of time and want to play the game again while attempting to get that perfect board.
If you're having trouble, try filling in the easier matches after working backward from the more stringent rules, such as target sums or greater/less than spots. As part of the process, don't be scared to rearrange the pieces.
Pixel Path and Block Blast are two additional puzzles that reward pattern recognition and reasoning, so if you like Pips NYT, you might also enjoy them.