Connections Today: June 22, 2026 Answers, Hints, and Final Category Help

A new day means a fresh set of puzzles in the New York Times’ Connections. If you’re trying to protect your streak and you’re only hunting down that stubborn final category, you’re in the right place—this guide includes both directional hints and the full solutions.

Key takeaways

  • The hint order follows the game’s usual difficulty ladder: Yellow, then Green, then Blue, and finally Purple.
  • Yellow points to the most important member of a group.
  • Green is tied to math-related terms.
  • Blue refers to descriptors for how something is spoken.
  • Purple focuses on words that begin with something loud.

Category hints (from easiest to hardest)

The clues here are arranged from the lowest difficulty category to the highest, matching the puzzle’s own progression: Yellow, Green, Blue, then Purple.

If you just want a nudge without revealing the category names outright, the guide provides “click below” hints that steer you toward the right direction while avoiding full spoilers.

For today’s yellow category, the theme is the most important of a group.

For today’s green category, the theme is maths.

For today’s blue category, the theme is how something is said.

For today’s purple category, the theme is words that start with something loud.

Herring Watch: there is no “generation” category.

If you’re in the mood for creative puzzle-solving beyond this daily brain-teaser, the guide also recommends checking out a selection of indie titles.

Today’s answers

The guide then presents the solutions, starting with the Yellow category and moving through Green, Blue, and Purple.

It also invites players who used the hints to share how they did in the comments, and notes that the answers can be found by clicking below.

Today’s solutions are:

Yellow Category: Dominant

Alpha, Head, Lead, Primary

Green Category: Multiplication Indicators

Blue Category: Pronunciation Descriptors

Short, Silent, Soft, Stressed

Purple Category: Starting With Explosive Onomatopoeia

Bangkok, Boomer, Popsicle, Powder

The guide ends by pointing out that these mobile word games can be a helpful way to learn new vocabulary and grow your word knowledge.

Marcus Chen is a gaming journalist and industry reporter with more than 10 years of experience. He covers releases, announcements, and trends across PC, PlayStation, Xbox, and Nintendo, and keeps a close eye on the indie scene and esports. Previously an editor at several gaming publications, he now writes news, reviews, and breakdowns of major industry moments—from big showcases to updates on popular titles. His work is aimed at players who want a clear, fast read on what happened and why it matters.