NYT Connections for July 10, 2026, puzzle #1125, was built around several convincing overlaps involving technology, music, food and familiar phrases. The biggest challenge was separating words that appeared to share an obvious connection but actually belonged to four different categories.

The most tempting decoy involved Airplane Mode, Safe Mode, À La Mode and Depeche Mode. Each phrase ends with “Mode,” but the puzzle deliberately placed one in every color group. Other misleading pairings included New Order as a command, Ball Gown with Strike a Pose as a fashion link, and Outkast as a music answer.
NYT Connections hints for July 10
Yellow hint: Look for controls and services commonly found in a smartphone’s settings menu.
Green hint: Think about words used to describe rich or freshly prepared desserts.
Blue hint: These are major names from 1980s synth-pop and electronic music.
Purple hint: Focus only on the opening word or sound in each phrase. They are familiar calls heard during a baseball game.
Stronger clues
Yellow: Hotspot and Location Services are the clearest starting pair.
Green: One answer describes a dessert served with ice cream.
Blue: Pet Shop Boys and Depeche Mode point strongly toward the category.
Purple: The four opening calls are Ball, Out, Safe and Strike.
The biggest traps in today’s puzzle
The false “Mode” group was the strongest piece of misdirection. Airplane Mode, Safe Mode, À La Mode and Depeche Mode appear to create a perfect four-word category, but each belongs somewhere different.
New Order and Do Not Disturb also resemble instructions, while Strike a Pose can be read as a command. That route fails because the fourth matching answer never forms a clean category.
Fashion offered another believable wrong turn. Ball Gown and Strike a Pose fit naturally together, while À La Mode can also mean fashionable. In this puzzle, however, its dessert meaning is the important one.
The most reliable solving path was to identify Hotspot and Location Services first, then recognize the synth-pop bands. Once those groups were removed, the dessert descriptions and baseball wordplay became easier to separate.
Today’s NYT Connections answers
Reveal the Yellow Group
Category: Smartphone settings
Answers: Airplane Mode, Do Not Disturb, Hotspot, Location Services
These are familiar controls or services available on modern smartphones. Airplane Mode limits wireless connections, Do Not Disturb reduces alerts, Hotspot shares mobile data and Location Services manages access to location information.
Hotspot and Location Services were the strongest anchors because both are closely associated with a phone’s settings menu. Safe Mode was the main trap, but it was needed elsewhere.
Reveal the Green Group
Category: Dessert menu descriptors
Answers: Decadent, Fresh-Baked, Molten, À La Mode
These terms are commonly used to describe desserts. Decadent suggests richness, Fresh-Baked highlights preparation, Molten often describes a warm liquid centre and À La Mode means served with ice cream.
Molten was the easiest starting point because of its close association with chocolate lava cake. À La Mode was designed to pull solvers toward the false “Mode” category.
Reveal the Blue Group
Category: 1980s synth-pop bands
Answers: Depeche Mode, Erasure, New Order, Pet Shop Boys
All four are prominent groups associated with synth-pop, electronic music and new wave during the 1980s.
Pet Shop Boys was probably the clearest band name. Depeche Mode then helped confirm the category, while Erasure and New Order were harder because both can also be read as ordinary words or phrases.
Reveal the Purple Group
Category: Starting with baseball calls
Answers: Ball Gown, Outkast, Safe Mode, Strike a Pose
Each answer begins with a baseball call: Ball, Out, Safe and Strike.
The remaining parts of the answers lead in unrelated directions, including fashion, music, technology and performance. Outkast was especially difficult because “Out” is embedded inside a single word.
What made puzzle #1125 difficult?
Today’s board rewarded solvers who resisted obvious repeated words. The four “Mode” answers looked convincing, but Connections requires every category to work cleanly across all four entries.
The puzzle also mixed proper names with ordinary phrases. Erasure, New Order and Outkast can all be interpreted outside music, while À La Mode can point toward either food or fashion. That overlap made the board feel more difficult than the final categories suggest.
Players can attempt the official puzzle and review completed-game statistics on the New York Times Connections page.















