Saturday’s NYT Connections puzzle No. 1084 came with its hints and answers, and for players who wanted the solution in one place, the day’s purple group was the one that demanded the most memory. The game asked solvers to sort 16 words into four pairs of four, with four mistakes enough to end the run.
That is why searches for nyt connections hints today tend to spike on a day like this. Connections has become the second-most popular NYT Games puzzle after the main crossword, and the appeal is simple: spot the links, beat the color ladder, and avoid burning through those four misses before the board is solved.
The puzzle’s color tiers move from easier to harder, with yellow usually giving away the most obvious connection before blue, green and then purple turn the screw. For Saturday’s board, the yellow group was built around a word that stands out and included “Sorry,” while the green group brought together “find,” “Right” and “Sound mind.” The blue group leaned on symbols people may recognize on sight even if they do not know what they are called.
The hardest set, though, came from song nominees from the first Grammy Awards in 1959, and that is where a lot of players likely stalled. The purple answers were “Nel Blu Dipinto di Blu (Volare)” by Domenico Modugno, “Catch a Falling Star” by Perry Como, “Fever” by Peggy Lee, “The Chipmunk Song” by David Seville and the Chipmunks, and “Witchcraft” by Frank Sinatra. If that list felt obscure, that was the point; the puzzle was not asking for modern chart knowledge so much as a very specific piece of music history.
That 1959 connection is what made the final group feel unfair in the best possible way. The rest of the board was difficult enough that many solvers could not coast into the answer by process of elimination, which is why the day’s reveal mattered as much as the clues themselves. For players who reached the purple box without the older Grammy reference, the route to a clean win was narrow.
For now, the board is the board: Saturday, May 30, 2026, puzzle No. 1084, with its four groups and its old-song trap in purple. The next Connections grid will bring a fresh set of 16 words, but this one will be remembered for making Frank Sinatra’s “Witchcraft” part of the day’s hardest solve.

