NYT Pips Hints & Answers Today: April 11, 2026

NYT Pips Answers & Guide – April 11, 2026

Edited by Ian Livengood • Solved by WordFinder Tips
NYT Pips Solution April 11, 2026

Table of Contents

Today’s Puzzle Overview

The April 11, 2026, edition of NYT Pips brings a fresh set of challenges designed by Ian Livengood and Rodolfo Kurchan. If you are staring at the grid feeling stuck, you are not alone. Pips is all about spatial reasoning and understanding how domino values interact with specific region constraints.

Breaking Down the Grid

Every board starts with a set of available dominoes. Your goal is to place these tiles so that the pips within each region satisfy the mathematical rule assigned to that area. Whether it is a sum, an equality, or a comparison, the logic remains consistent. Always look for the most restrictive regions first to narrow down your options.

Interactive Pips Solution

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

5
9
7
5

6
10
<4
10

5
1
10
>5
<5
<5
>5
5
<5
5

Deep Mechanic Analysis & Optimal Paths

Success in Pips requires more than just guessing. You need to treat the board like a logic puzzle where every placement has a ripple effect. When you place a domino, you effectively remove two numbers from your pool and lock them into specific coordinates.

Identifying High-Constraint Regions

Look for regions that require specific sums or equality. If a region asks for a sum of 1, you know exactly which dominoes can fit there. If a region requires equality, you are looking for tiles that share the same pip count on both ends. These are your anchors. Use them to eliminate possibilities for the rest of the board.

Managing Your Domino Pool

Keep a close eye on your remaining dominoes. It is easy to get tunnel vision on one corner of the grid while ignoring the fact that you have already used your high-value tiles. If you find yourself with only low-value dominoes left for a high-sum region, you know you made a mistake earlier. Backtrack immediately rather than forcing a bad fit.

Today’s Winning Solutions

Below are the first five placements for each difficulty level. Use these to get your momentum going.

Easy Difficulty Placements

Placement Domino Used
1 [1,1] and [0,1]
2 [3,0] and [4,0]
3 [2,2] and [2,3]
4 [3,2] and [4,2]
5 [2,1] and [2,0]

Medium Difficulty Placements

Placement Domino Used
1 [3,2] and [3,3]
2 [2,0] and [2,1]
3 [0,2] and [0,1]
4 [1,3] and [1,4]
5 [1,2] and [2,2]

Hard Difficulty Placements

Placement Domino Used
1 [5,4] and [4,4]
2 [6,0] and [5,0]
3 [2,2] and [2,3]
4 [1,0] and [2,0]
5 [0,2] and [0,3]

Post-Game Analysis

The logic today relies heavily on the interaction between the sum regions and the equality constraints. By placing the equality tiles first, you create a skeleton for the rest of the board. The remaining empty regions then become much easier to fill by process of elimination.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What is today’s Pips? Today’s puzzle is a logic-based grid game where you must place dominoes to satisfy specific mathematical constraints within defined regions.
  • How do the symbols in Pips work? The symbols indicate the rule for that region, such as a sum, an equality, or a comparison like greater than or less than.
  • Do touching domino tiles have to match? No, touching dominoes do not need to match; they only need to satisfy the mathematical rules of the regions they occupy.