NYT Pips Hints, Answers For 29-June-2026
Entertainment, NYT GamesPublished Jun 29, 2026 NYT Pips Hints, Answers For 29-June-2026
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NYT Pips is a quick-thinking logic puzzle built around domino tiles and color-coded rules.
Each weekday brings a new set of Easy, Medium, and Hard boards that ask you to line up pips so every region meets its requirement.
If something isn’t clicking today, try gentle hints below before jumping into the full solutions for all three boards.
How Pips Works
Pips takes standard domino tiles and drops them into color-coded regions, each with its own condition.
Every half-tile counts, and the goal is to fill the board so each zone follows its rule.
You’ll run into a few core types:
- Number: The pips in that region must add up to the target.
- Equal: All tile halves show the same value.
- Not Equal: Every value is different.
- Less Than / Greater Than: The region total must stay under or above the shown number.
The rules stay the same across all three boards. What changes is how tightly they’re arranged.
A good first step is to solve strict Number or Equal zones before moving on to the flexible ones.
Full Answers
Easy

🔽Show Image
Equal: Everything in this space must be equal.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 0-0, placed horizontally.
Number (2): Everything in this space must add up to 2.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 3-2, placed vertically.
Number (15): Everything in this space must add up to 15.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 5-5, placed vertically; 6-5, placed vertically.
Greater Than (2): Everything in this space must be greater than 2.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 0-3, placed horizontally; 1-1, placed vertically.
Medium

🔽Show Image
Greater Than (0): Everything in this space must be greater than 0.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 1-1, placed vertically.
Greater Than (1): Everything in this space must be greater than 1.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 3-0, placed vertically.
Greater Than (0): Everything in this space must be greater than 0.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 1-4, placed vertically.
Number (7): Everything in this space must add up to 7.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 1-1, placed vertically; 6-0, placed vertically.
Number (2): Everything in this space must add up to 2.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 2-0, placed vertically; 3-0, placed vertically.
Greater Than (2): Everything in this space must be greater than 2.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 1-4, placed vertically.
Greater Than (3): Everything in this space must be greater than 3.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 4-0, placed vertically.
Greater Than (4): Everything in this space must be greater than 4.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 5-1, placed vertically.
Hard

🔽Show Image
Number (16): Everything in this space must add up to 16.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 5-5, placed vertically; 6-4, placed vertically.
Number (3): Everything in this space must add up to 3.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 0-0, placed horizontally; 4-3, placed horizontally.
Number (4): Everything in this space must add up to 4.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 4-3, placed horizontally.
Number (16): Everything in this space must add up to 16.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 2-5, placed horizontally; 6-5, placed vertically.
Number (3): Everything in this space must add up to 3.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 3-0, placed horizontally.
Number (1): Everything in this space must add up to 1.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 3-0, placed horizontally; 1-4, placed vertically.
Number (6): Everything in this space must add up to 6.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 1-6, placed horizontally.
Number (3): Everything in this space must add up to 3.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 1-6, placed horizontally; 2-5, placed horizontally.
Equal: Everything in this space must be equal.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 6-4, placed vertically; 4-4, placed horizontally; 1-4, placed vertically.
Greater Than (9): Everything in this space must be greater than 9.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 6-6, placed horizontally.
Equal: Everything in this space must be equal.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 3-3, placed horizontally.
Number (6): Everything in this space must add up to 6.
🔽Show Answer
The answer is 2-4, placed horizontally.
Tip: Use the more complex rules backward; fill in tricky zones first, then wrap the remaining dominoes into the free space.
See Also
Explore more daily puzzles and NYT game solutions.
- Yesterday’s NYT Pips Hints and Answers
- Today’s NYT Connections: Hints and answers
- Today’s NYT Strands: Hints and answers
- Today’s NYT Wordle: Hints and answers
- Today’s NYT Mini Crossword: Hints and answers
- Today’s NYT Spelling Bee: Hints and answers
- Explore our Quizzes page for unique polls, trivia, and challenges
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Author, Bored Panda
Bored Panda is an independent digital publisher sharing highlights from internet culture, entertainment, and everyday life with readers around the world. Our goal is to bring you engaging, trustworthy, and helpful content. We fact-check information using primary sources, such as official statements, public records, and interviews, or use reliable secondary sources. Editors review every story for accuracy and clarity before publishing. If we spot a mistake or learn something new, we’ll update it promptly. When you see “Editorial Staff,” it means our team collaborated to curate stories, roundups, and explainers based on verified information. Original stories and features are credited to individual writers. We select editorial images from agencies, official press materials, or use Creative Commons images with clear credit, so you can trust their source. For tips, corrections, or questions, please send an email to [email protected] or use our contact form.
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Editorial Staff
Author, Bored Panda
Read more »Bored Panda is an independent digital publisher sharing highlights from internet culture, entertainment, and everyday life with readers around the world. Our goal is to bring you engaging, trustworthy, and helpful content. We fact-check information using primary sources, such as official statements, public records, and interviews, or use reliable secondary sources. Editors review every story for accuracy and clarity before publishing. If we spot a mistake or learn something new, we’ll update it promptly. When you see “Editorial Staff,” it means our team collaborated to curate stories, roundups, and explainers based on verified information. Original stories and features are credited to individual writers. We select editorial images from agencies, official press materials, or use Creative Commons images with clear credit, so you can trust their source. For tips, corrections, or questions, please send an email to [email protected] or use our contact form.
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POST Badenoch blasts 'moaning' female Labour MPs over Burnham jobs 'quota'

Kemi Badenoch has told Labour women to earn a job in Andy Burnham's Cabinet instead of demanding they are handed jobs because of their gender.
The Tory leader lashed out today amid reports that female MPs are demanding the de-facto new prime minister introduce a 50:50 gender split 'quota' in his government.
Amid reports that former foreign secretary David Miliband is being lined up to return to the role, possibly with his brother Ed as Chancellor, one female minister also complained that Burnham could not have 'more Milibands than women' in the top posts.
But in a scathing article in the Times today Mrs Badenoch told them to 'stop moaning' and get chosen on merit instead of retreating into 'more of the failed identity politics that is holding back our country'.
'There are many, many reasons why you shouldn't have any Milibands in the cabinet,' she said.
'But complaining that the boys haven't given them the right jobs or that the boys are taking all the jobs, just shows that Labour's women still don't get it.'
The idea of quotas was also attacked by Baroness Jacqui Smith, Labour's Skills Minister.
Asked by Times Radio if Mr Burnham should reserve jobs for women, she said: 'No, I think what Andy Burnham should be doing is building the very best team around him to change this country.'
A letter written by the Women's Parliamentary Labour Party has called on Mr Burnham to ensure a 50:50 split between men and women in government jobs
Amid reports that former foreign secretary David Miliband (above, right, in 2010) is being lined up to return to the role, possibly with his brother Ed as Chancellor, one female minister complained that Burnham could not have 'more Milibands than women' in the top posts
But Mrs Badenoch told them to pipe down and get chosen on merit instead of retreating into 'more of the failed identity politics that is holding back our country'
A letter written by the Women's Parliamentary Labour Party and seen by the BBC has called on Mr Burnham to ensure a 50:50 split between men and women in government jobs after he succeeds Sir Keir Starmer.
'We are asking you to demonstrate this change from day one and address the toxicity and misogyny within our own party and government,' it said.
Labour has never had a female leader, while the Conservatives have had three, and Mrs Badenoch urged the government to follow its meritocratic example.
'If you run a meritocracy, then you do not have to worry about jobs for the boys,' she wrote.
'Every woman who is a Conservative MP, every woman who has ever won the leadership, has had to fight to get where she is.
'By contrast, Labour women are demanding guarantees from Burnham. But the truth is he doesn't have to give any guarantees.
'If none of Labour's women are prepared to get their hands dirty and challenge him for the leadership, their demands are toothless.'
'In fact, it's quite revealing that the women's parliamentary Labour Party has written to Burnham asking him to commit himself to at least 50 per cent female ministers.
'This has nothing to do with meritocracy. It is yet more of the failed identity politics that is holding back our country.'