NYT Strands today — hints, answers and spangram for Wednesday, October 16 (game #227)

2 weeks ago 6
NYT Strands homescreen on a mobile phone screen, on a light blue background
(Image credit: New York Times)

Strands is the NYT's latest word game after the likes of Wordle, Spelling Bee and Connections – and it's great fun. It can be difficult, though, so read on for my Strands hints.

Want more word-based fun? Then check out my Wordle today, NYT Connections today and Quordle today pages for hints and answers for those games.

SPOILER WARNING: Information about NYT Strands today is below, so don't read on if you don't want to know the answers.

Your Strands expert

Marc McLaren

NYT Strands today (game #227) - hint #1 - today's theme

What is the theme of today's NYT Strands?

Today's NYT Strands theme is… How Poe-tic

NYT Strands today (game #227) - hint #2 - clue words

Play any of these words to unlock the in-game hints system.

  • WEAR
  • WINK
  • DINNER
  • MIND
  • MINE
  • PANG

NYT Strands today (game #227) - hint #3 - spangram

What is a hint for today's spangram?

Black bird

NYT Strands today (game #227) - hint #4 - spangram position

What are two sides of the board that today's spangram touches?

First: top, 5th column

Last: bottom, 4th column

Right, the answers are below, so DO NOT SCROLL ANY FURTHER IF YOU DON'T WANT TO SEE THEM.

NYT Strands today (game #227) - the answers

NYT Strands answers for game 227 on a blue background

(Image credit: New York Times)

The answers to today's Strands, game #227, are…

  • DREARY
  • PONDERED
  • WEARY
  • MIDNIGHT
  • WEAK
  • NEVERMORE
  • SPANGRAM: THERAVEN

  • My rating: Moderate
  • My score: Perfect

Sorry, NYT – this one gets a big fail from me. Not because I failed to solve it; I completed it without using any hints. No, the problem here is that I was forced to solve it entirely by trial and error, because I have not read Edgar Allan Poe's The Raven.

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Look, I'm not a philistine. I'm relatively well read, although my tastes tend more towards modern fiction than the 'classics'. But setting a puzzle that involves knowledge of one specific poem written more than 100 years ago, even one as famous as The Raven, is a bit elitist, no? Strands has form here, having previously made us all find words from The Very Hungry Caterpillar, among others. And that was stupid too.

Strands is at its best when it's inclusive, when the puzzles are those that people could have a good guess at even if they didn't know the specifics. Obviously a single game can't cater for everyone, but the answers here are impossible to get merely by thinking – you know, the process of educated guessing, which is what games like this are usually about. Words such as PONDERED and WEAK here… unless you know the poem, you don't have a chance. Well, you do – you can blindly hunt for words that might be the answer until you hit upon the right ones. But that's not my idea of fun.

Anyway, I did solve it because the theme clue put a capital P in 'How Poe-tic', so it was obviously going to be Poe-related. I looked for HEART and didn't find it, so I moved on to RAVEN and got the spangram, but everything after that was pure drudgery.

How did you do today? Send me an email and let me know.


Yesterday's NYT Strands answers (Tuesday, 15 October, game #226)

  • SCALE
  • FEATHER
  • HAIR
  • HORN
  • SHELL
  • WING
  • SPANGRAM: CREATUREFEATURE

What is NYT Strands?

Strands is the NYT's new word game, following Wordle and Connections. It's now out of beta so is a fully fledged member of the NYT's games stable and can be played on the NYT Games site on desktop or mobile.

I've got a full guide to how to play NYT Strands, complete with tips for solving it, so check that out if you're struggling to beat it each day.

Marc is TechRadar’s Global Editor in Chief, the latest in a long line of senior editorial roles he’s held in a career that started the week that Google launched (nice of them to mark the occasion). Prior to joining TR, he was UK Editor in Chief on Tom’s Guide, where he oversaw all gaming, streaming, audio, TV, entertainment, how-to and cameras coverage. He's also a former editor of the tech website Stuff and spent five years at the music magazine NME, where his duties mainly involved spoiling other people’s fun. He’s based in London, and has tested and written about phones, tablets, wearables, streaming boxes, smart home devices, Bluetooth speakers, headphones, games, TVs, cameras and pretty much every other type of gadget you can think of. An avid photographer, Marc likes nothing better than taking pictures of very small things (bugs, his daughters) or very big things (distant galaxies). He also enjoys live music, gaming, cycling, and beating Wordle (he authors the daily Wordle today page).

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