Skip to content

The New York Times Puzzle Empire: How Wordle, Strands, and Connections Changed Daily Games

Read Editorial Disclaimer
Disclaimer: Perspectives here reflect AI-POV and AI-assisted analysis, not any specific human author. Read full disclaimer — issues: report@theaipov.news

The New York Times did not stumble into games. It bought Wordle for a price in the low seven figures in January 2022, added Strands and Connections, and turned a newspaper into a daily ritual. The result is a habit loop that drives subscriptions and engagement while other publishers chase the same play.

The Times Built a Games Business That Funds the Newsroom

As of 2025, New York Times Games had become a major revenue driver. Players worldwide solved over 11 billion puzzles in 2025, with games reaching more than 10 million daily players across all platforms and over one million premium subscribers to games. According to AP News and the Times Company, about half of the company’s 12.33 million subscribers as of September 2025 purchase a bundle that includes games and other products; digital-only subscription revenue increased 14% year-over-year. Company leadership have joked internally that the Times is now a gaming company that also happens to offer news. The Games unit helps fund roughly 3,000 journalists at a time when many outlets are cutting staff.

The NYT Games app generated approximately $11.2 million in in-app purchase revenue in Q2 2024, up from $6.64 million in Q1 2024 and from about $1.74 million in Q1 2020. A Games-only subscription runs $5 per month or $40 annually; the All Access bundle that includes games starts at $4 per month and then $25 monthly after the first year. More people now pay for NYT Games than for news alone in some segments, making games central to the subscription strategy and to the stated goal of reaching 15 million subscribers.

Wordle Was the Gateway; Strands and Connections Locked the Habit

Wordle was created by Josh Wardle, a Brooklyn-based software engineer, as a gift for his partner in January 2021. It had fewer than 100 daily players in early November 2021, then reached 300,000 within weeks and millions by the time the Times acquired it. The Times kept the game free to play and did not change the rules. Wordle brought tens of millions of new users to the Times and accounted for 4.8 billion plays in 2023 out of more than 8 billion total puzzle plays that year. By 2026 the portfolio had expanded: Strands, a word-search game where players uncover themed words and a “spangram” on a 6×8 grid, joined Wordle and Connections. The Times also introduced Crossplay, its first two-player word game, in January 2026, available in a dedicated app with real-time multiplayer and in-game chat.

Connections, launched in June 2023, was created and is edited by Wyna Liu, who joined as an associate puzzle editor in 2020. Everdeen Mason is Editorial Director of NYT Games and oversees Wordle, Connections, Strands, and the rest of the lineup. The games department has grown to roughly 100 people, on par with the business desk, including editors, developers, designers, and data scientists. The human-crafted nature of the puzzles is a deliberate differentiator: these are not algorithmically generated, which the Times uses to justify premium positioning and to build trust.

Monetization and Backlash: The Mini Paywall

On August 27, 2025, the Times put the Mini Crossword behind a paywall, along with Tiles and Letter Boxed. The Mini had been free since 2014. The move triggered sharp criticism: users called it greedy, and some said they cancelled subscriptions in response. Kotaku and The Verge reported that the change coincided with the launch of a new free game, Pips, less than two weeks earlier, which read to many as a swap of free content for paid. The tension is structural. The Times is maximising revenue from games while players who had long enjoyed the Mini as a free daily ritual felt the loss. The company’s bet is that the habit and the bundle are sticky enough that most subscribers will stay.

What This Actually Means

The puzzle empire is not a side project. It is a core part of how the Times makes money and retains subscribers. Wordle, Strands, Connections, and the rest create a daily trigger: play at the same time, share results, maintain streaks. Jonathan Knight, head of games at the New York Times, has said that players who play games are much more loyal to the news than those who do not. The Hook Model—trigger, action, variable reward, investment—is explicitly in play. Other publishers, including The Washington Post, Vox Media, The Boston Globe, Morning Brew, Apple, and LinkedIn, have added puzzles, but the Times’ head start and network effects mean fewer people play those games and less social sharing, so the gap is hard to close. The Times turned a newspaper into a daily games destination and used that to fund journalism. The trade-off is that more of the product is now behind a paywall, and the brand is as much about Wordle and Strands as it is about the front page.

What Are Wordle, Strands, and Connections?

Wordle is a daily word game: one five-letter word per day, six guesses, with shareable results in a grid of coloured squares. The Times acquired it in January 2022. Connections, launched in June 2023, presents 16 words that players group into four sets of four based on a common theme; it is edited daily by Wyna Liu. Strands is a word-search game on a 6×8 letter grid; players find themed words and a spangram that touches two opposite sides, with letters connecting vertically, horizontally, or diagonally. All three are part of NYT Games, along with the Crossword, Mini Crossword, Spelling Bee, Letter Boxed, Tiles, and others. Access is through the NYT Games app, nytimes.com/games, and the News app Play tab. Subscribers can replay past puzzles; non-subscribers face limits and paywalls on some games.

Sources

The New York Times Company, AP News, The New York Times Company, Wikipedia, Nieman Journalism Lab, Kotaku, The Verge, Axios, Digiday, Vanity Fair, NPR

Related Video

Related video — Watch on YouTube
Read More News
Mar 18

Todd Creek Farms homeowners association lawsuit: self-dealing, $900K legal bill, and a rare HOA bankruptcy

Mar 18

Multiple severe thunderstorm alerts issued for south carolina counties? Fact-Check Here

Mar 18

What is the new UK law protecting farm animals from dog attacks?

Mar 18

Unlimited fines for livestock worrying: why the UK finally cracked down on dog attacks.

Mar 18

New police powers to seize dogs and use DNA: how the UK livestock law changes enforcement.

Mar 17

What is the inference inflection? NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang on the next phase of the AI boom

Mar 17

Tri-State storm damage and outages: what we know so far

Mar 17

The indie ‘Small Web’ is turning into search’s underground resistance zone

Mar 17

SAVE America Act turns election rules into a loyalty test to Trump

Mar 17

Israel’s Shadow War With Iran Is Now a Test of U.S. Deterrence

Mar 17

Europe Quietly Turns Its Back on Trump Over Iran

Mar 17

Zelenskiy Warns UK Parliament on Iran-Russia Drone Threat and the Cost of Security

Mar 17

Zelenskiy: AI, Drones and Defence Systems Are Reshaping Modern War

Mar 17

Rachel Reeves’ Mais Lecture on Investment, Productivity, and Political Priorities

Mar 17

“Leadership is not about waiting for perfect certainty”: Rachel Reeves’ Mais Lecture on an active state and Britain’s economic security

Mar 17

“Where it is in our national interest to align with EU regulation, we should be prepared to do so”: Rachel Reeves’ Mais Lecture on rebuilding UK–EU economic ties

Mar 17

“No partnership is more important than the one with our European neighbours”: Rachel Reeves’ Mais Lecture on alliances, Ukraine, and shared security

Mar 17

“We are the birthplace of businesses including DeepMind, Wayve, and Arm”: Rachel Reeves’ Mais Lecture sets out Britain’s AI advantage

Mar 17

“To every entrepreneur looking to build a new AI product, come to the UK”: Rachel Reeves’ Mais Lecture pitch to global innovators

Mar 17

“Every part of our strategy on AI is aimed at ensuring that our people have a share in the prosperity that AI can create”: Rachel Reeves’ Mais Lecture on skills and jobs

Mar 17

Oscars 2026 Review: Why ‘One Battle After Another’ Winning Best Picture Signals a Shift Away From Prestige Formulas

Mar 17

Marquette’s Returnees and the Hidden Stakes of the Transfer Portal

Mar 17

Alabama Snow Possible: What We Know and What to Watch

Mar 17

Doctor Who’s Thirteen-Yaz Moment Is the Next Domino for the Franchise

Mar 17

Ireland’s TV fairy tales still dodge the country’s real economic story

Mar 17

All we know about today’s Massachusetts power outages so far

Mar 17

Israel’s Iran strikes quietly test how far Trump will gamble on Hormuz

Mar 17

Bond Markets Are Quietly Signaling They Don’t Believe the Fed’s Soft-Landing Story

Mar 17

Katelyn Cummins’ Dancing Win Shows How Irish TV Still Treats Working-Class Stories as Weekend Escapism

Mar 17

Peggy Siegal Controversy: Why Her Epstein Revelations Threaten Hollywood’s Power Structure

Mar 17

Dolores Keane’s legacy shows how folk music guarded truths Ireland’s elites ignored

Mar 17

What this lawsuit over dictionary data means for every AI startup scraping the web

Mar 17

Publishers suing OpenAI are late to a fight they already helped create

Mar 17

Iran is quietly testing how much pain the world will tolerate at Hormuz

Mar 16

New Zealand’s petrol pain is really a subsidy war between drivers and EV buyers