NYT Pips Hints & Answers Today: March 6, 2026

NYT Pips Answers, Cheats & Guide – March 6, 2026

Edited by Ian Livengood • Solved by WordFinder Tips
NYT Pips Solution March 6, 2026

Table of Contents

Today’s NYT Pips Puzzle Overview

The NYT Pips puzzle for March 6, 2026, presents a fresh challenge across all difficulty levels. Players must strategically place dominoes onto a grid, satisfying various region constraints. This daily logic game tests your spatial reasoning and deduction skills.

Today’s puzzles, crafted by Ian Livengood (Easy) and Rodolfo Kurchan (Medium, Hard), feature a mix of region types. Expect to encounter ‘equals’, ‘sum’, ‘less than’, ‘greater than’, and ’empty’ regions. Mastering these rules is key to success.

Interactive Pips Solution

Tap the domino tiles in the hand below to reveal their position on the board.

<2
>4

8
<6

15
1
3
12
>3
4
>3
4
7
<4

🧠 Deep Mechanic Analysis

Solving NYT Pips requires a systematic approach, especially for the harder puzzles. Start by identifying the most restrictive regions to narrow down possibilities.

Empty Regions: These cells cannot be covered by any domino. Use them to immediately eliminate potential domino placements. They often create boundaries for adjacent regions.
Single-Cell Regions: Regions with only one cell and a ‘less than’ or ‘greater than’ constraint are powerful. For example, a ‘less than 2’ region must contain a 0 or 1 pip. A ‘greater than 4’ region must contain a 5 or 6 pip.
Sum Regions: These regions require the sum of pips within them to match a target number. Look for small sum targets (like ‘sum 1’) or large ones (like ‘sum 12’) as they severely limit domino choices. A ‘sum 1’ region with two cells, for instance, must contain a [0,1] domino.
Equals Regions: All cells within an ‘equals’ region must display the same pip count. If an ‘equals’ region has three cells, and you place a domino covering two of them, the third cell must also match that pip value. This helps deduce the pips on other dominoes.
Domino Inventory: Keep track of your available dominoes. Each domino is unique and can only be used once. If a region demands a specific pip combination, check if that domino is still available.
Edge and Corner Logic: Dominoes placed along the grid’s edges or in corners have fewer adjacent cells. This often makes their placement easier to deduce, as they interact with fewer other regions.

✅ Today’s Winning Solutions

Here are the solutions for today’s NYT Pips puzzle, March 6, 2026, across all difficulties.

Easy Puzzle Solution (ID 668)

Domino Placement (Row, Col)
[4,4] (1,1) & (1,2)
[2,2] (0,2) & (0,3)
[4,6] (1,3) & (2,3)
[3,4] (3,1) & (2,1)
[0,4] (2,0) & (1,0)

Medium Puzzle Solution (ID 693)

Domino Placement (Row, Col)
[1,4] (3,3) & (3,4)
[6,3] (1,2) & (1,1)
[2,4] (1,3) & (0,3)
[3,0] (2,1) & (2,0)
[1,5] (2,3) & (2,2)
[4,6] (0,4) & (1,4)
[5,3] (3,2) & (3,1)

Hard Puzzle Solution (ID 720)

Domino Placement (Row, Col)
[6,2] (3,3) & (4,3)
[0,3] (3,2) & (2,2)
[5,5] (6,4) & (7,4)
[4,3] (6,1) & (7,1)
[1,6] (1,6) & (0,6)
[3,3] (0,4) & (1,4)
[5,4] (0,0) & (1,0)
[3,6] (2,4) & (3,4)
[0,0] (2,6) & (3,6)
[3,1] (8,2) & (8,1)
[0,6] (3,0) & (2,0)
[1,1] (8,4) & (8,5)
[4,0] (4,1) & (3,1)

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What is NYT Pips?

    NYT Pips is a daily logic puzzle from The New York Times. You place a set of dominoes onto a grid, ensuring each domino covers two cells and satisfies specific region rules.

  • How do I know which dominoes to use?

    Each puzzle provides a unique set of dominoes you must place. You must use every domino exactly once to complete the grid.

  • Can a domino cover cells in different regions?

    Yes, a single domino can span across two different regions. The pips on that domino must satisfy the rules of both regions it covers.