The New York Times has dropped a new puzzle game — here's how to play Pips

Apple App Store Awards Winner NYT Games
(Image credit: Future)

The New York Times has added another puzzle to its growing collection of daily games. Pips is a domino-based logic puzzle that challenges players to fill a board while meeting specific regional conditions, combining spatial reasoning with mathematical constraints.

Unlike Wordle or Connections, Pips requires understanding domino mechanics and regional rules simultaneously. The game presents varying difficulty levels and uses color-coded regions with different mathematical requirements that must be satisfied to complete each puzzle.

1. Launch Pips

Head to New York Times Games, whether that's online or through the app, and find Pips in the puzzle lineup. Click on it to get started.

You'll see three difficulty options: Easy, Medium, and Hard. Pick whichever sounds right for you and hit Play. The harder levels mean more complicated rules and trickier board layouts.

2. Understand the game mechanics

A popup will tell you the basic idea: Fill the board with all the dominoes to meet the conditions. Tap to rotate the dominoes. That covers the main goal, but there's more to learn about the colored areas.

The colored regions have little symbols in their bottom right corners that tell you what rules apply there. These are basically math requirements that your domino dots need to follow.

Areas without any color don't have special rules, you can put any domino there as long as it fits the puzzle.

3. Learn what the symbols mean

The game uses a few different types of rules. If you see Number 2, all the dots in that area need to add up to exactly 2.

An Equal Sign means all the dots in that region have to be the same number.

Less Than 7 means the dots need to add up to less than 7. Getting comfortable with these rules is key since your dominoes need to fit the space AND follow the math rules.

Each colored area shows its rule in the corner, so you can always double-check what you need to do.

4. Decide if you want help getting started

If you're new to this puzzle, hit Play Tutorial and the game will walk you through the basics with examples. It's pretty helpful for understanding how everything works together.

If you're already comfortable with logic puzzles, feel free to skip the tutorial and jump right in. You can always come back to it later if you get stuck.

The tutorial shows you how to spin dominoes around, where to place them, and how to satisfy those regional rules.

5. Get the hang of moving and placing dominoes

Tap any domino to rotate it — this is super important because you need the dots arranged just right to fit both the board space and meet the requirements for colored regions.

Think about how many dots each colored area needs and how turning a domino might affect nearby areas too. Sometimes you need to plan a few moves ahead to make sure everything works out.

Don't worry about making mistakes, the game will let you know right away if you've broken a rule, so you can try again and learn as you go.

Follow Tom's Guide on Google News to get our up-to-date news, how-tos, and reviews in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button.

More from Tom's Guide

Category
Arrow
Arrow
Back to Mobile Cell Phones
Brand
Arrow
Storage Size
Arrow
Colour
Arrow
Minimum Price
Arrow
Any Minimum Price
Maximum Price
Arrow
Any Maximum Price
Showing 10 of 137 deals
Filters
Arrow
(256GB White)
Our Review
1
Apple iPhone 16 Pro Max White...
Mint Mobile
Our Review
3
Google Pixel Unlocked Phones
Amazon
Our Review
4
Google Pixel Unlocked Phones
Amazon
bundle
(256GB)
Our Review
5
Apple iPhone 16 Pro Max 256GB...
Verizon
(256GB)
Our Review
6
Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra...
Samsung
Our Review
7
Google Pixel 9 Pro 128 GB
Verizon
(128GB)
Our Review
8
Google - Pixel 9a 128GB...
Best Buy
(Black)
Our Review
9
Apple iPhone 16 Pro Max 256...
Visible
(Black)
Our Review
10
Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra...
Mint Mobile
Show more
TOPICS
Kaycee Hill
How-to Editor

Kaycee is Tom's Guide's How-To Editor, known for tutorials that get straight to what works. She writes across phones, homes, TVs and everything in between — because life doesn't stick to categories and neither should good advice. She's spent years in content creation doing one thing really well: making complicated things click. Kaycee is also an award-winning poet and co-editor at Fox and Star Books.

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.