If todayâs Connections grid felt like it kept changing its mind, youâre not imagining it. January 27âs puzzle leans on words that look like they belong to one âworldâ (Batman, baseball, hockey, folklore), then quietly asks you to switch contexts mid-thought. The result is a board where several tiles seem to fit two different groups until you spot what the editor is really doing.
A helpful way to play this one: try grouping by âtype of labelâ first. Are you looking at roles, teams, character titles, or wordplay? When you separate those buckets, the set starts to behave. If youâd like to play along before revealing anything, the official New York Times Connections game is the cleanest reference point for the daily grid.
Todayâs word list: BATMOBILE, CAPSTONE, BALLROOM, BASEMENT, CHARACTER, CARD, CUTUP, DEVIL, FLYER, FRIAR, JOKER, MAID, PENGUIN, RANGER, ROBIN, SHERIFF.
How this grid tries to trick you: âROBINâ can point you to Batman before it points you to Robin Hood. âPENGUINâ looks like an animal before it becomes a team name. âCARDâ can feel like a physical object before it becomes a âfunny personâ clue sitting beside JOKER and CUTUP. The cleanest path is to lock one obvious set, then treat the rest like a sorting exercise: sports names, folklore titles, and a last group thatâs basically a spelling/starting-letters game.
Expert hints (no spoilers hidden):
- One group is âpeople youâd describe as funnyâ â think personalities or vibes, not objects.
- Another group is hockey, but not âpositionsâ â youâre looking for names that appear on jerseys and logos.
- One group is Robin Hood-adjacent, but the connection is specifically about the first word used in certain character names.
- The final group is the most âConnections-yâ twist: the words start with the same chunk as a piece of baseball equipment.
If youâre solving without reveals, try this order: lock the âfunny peopleâ set first (it has the strongest internal logic), then the NHL set, then the Robin Hood naming set, and leave the baseball-starting-letters group for last as a confirm-each-one check.
Tap to reveal answers only:
Yellow â Quite The Laugh
CARD, CHARACTER, CUTUP, JOKER
Green â NHL Team Member
DEVIL, FLYER, PENGUIN, RANGER
Blue â First Words Of Robin Hood Character Names
FRIAR, MAID, ROBIN, SHERIFF
Purple â Starting With Baseball Gear
BALLROOM, BASEMENT, BATMOBILE, CAPSTONE
The satisfying âahaâ today is how the grid rewards you for thinking like an editor, not a dictionary: a penguin can waddle, sure â but it can also skate; a robin can be a sidekick â but it can also be the lead name in a legend; and baseball gear can be the quiet prefix that makes four unrelated words suddenly snap into the same family.
If you missed yesterdayâs grid, hereâs the recap you can use to solve it quickly (and double-check your groups): NYT Connections Today January 26, 2026: Hints & Answers.
Come back tomorrow and youâll likely notice the same pattern again: Connections loves everyday words that are âtrueâ in more than one direction. When a tile feels too easy, thatâs usually your cue to test it against a second meaning before you commit.













