New York, July 13, 2026, 08:11 (EDT)
Help pages for The New York Times Co NYSE:NYT’s Connections puzzle No. 1,128 were live at CNET, Yahoo Tech and TechRadar ahead of Monday’s regular U.S. market open. A July 11-13 sample shows all three outlets publishing one dated Connections page a day, an annualized run rate of 1,095 URLs before Wordle, Strands or sister publications enter the count.
The count is not a revenue estimate. It matters because the same daily habit produces two different businesses: the Times owns the game, the direct user relationship and the subscription pitch, while outside publishers capture demand for clues and answers in their own page inventory. The Times says free Wordle and Connections play helps build audiences that can be monetized with advertising, affiliate revenue or eventual subscription conversion.
The publishing clock starts well before New York wakes. A CNET syndication feed timestamped its July 13 Connections item at 20:00:42 UTC on Sunday, with Wordle and Strands entries following 18 seconds later. TechRadar says a new Connections puzzle appears at midnight in each user’s time zone, creating a rolling audience window rather than one global launch hour.
| Outlet | July 11 | July 12 | July 13 | Annualized Connections run rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CNET | #1126 | #1127 | #1128 | 365 pages |
| Yahoo Tech | #1126 | #1127 | #1128 | 365 pages |
| TechRadar | #1126 | #1127 | #1128 | 365 pages |
| Total | 3 pages | 3 pages | 3 pages | 1,095 pages |
CNET’s sequence is confirmed by its dated #1126 and #1127 postings; Yahoo published the same successive game numbers, while TechRadar’s July 13 article links back to #1127 and its July 11 edition covers #1126. The run rate multiplies the observed three-pages-a-day cadence by 365; it is not an audited historical count.
The Times is monetizing that behavior at a richer layer. First-quarter digital-only subscription revenue rose 16.1% to $389.0 million, while digital advertising revenue climbed 31.6% to $93.3 million. Digital-only subscribers reached 12.52 million, up 1.46 million from a year earlier; ARPU — average revenue from each digital subscriber over a 28-day billing cycle — increased to $9.77.
Chief Executive Meredith Kopit Levien said in May that the company’s priorities were designed to “build direct relationships and daily habits with millions more people.” The Times is targeting 15 million total subscribers by the end of 2027, against 13.08 million at the end of March. It does not disclose revenue for Connections or individual games. SEC
The context is less forgiving for the distributors. Ziff Davis Inc (NASDAQ:ZD), CNET’s owner, reported a 12.9% drop in first-quarter Technology & Shopping revenue; CEO Vivek Shah said the company was managing “headwinds challenging other parts of our portfolio.” Future plc (LON:FUTR), which owns TechRadar, reported first-half website sessions down 15% and programmatic advertising revenue — ads sold through automated exchanges — down 17%, even as directly sold advertising grew 8%. Future CEO Kevin Li Ying said the “search ecosystem is changing faster.” SEC
| Company and role | Latest disclosed trend | Investor read-through |
|---|---|---|
| New York Times — game owner | Digital-only subscription revenue +16.1%; digital ads +31.6% | Owns the product, user data and paid-conversion path |
| Ziff Davis/CNET — outside publisher | Technology & Shopping revenue −12.9% | Daily pages add inventory inside a contracting segment |
| Future/TechRadar — outside publisher | Sessions −15%; programmatic ads −17%; direct ads +8% | Search volume is under pressure; direct sales offer some cushion |
The periods and business scopes are not directly comparable, but the direction is clear. NYT shares were quoted at $74.96 before Monday’s open, giving the company a market value of about $12.3 billion. Management expects second-quarter digital-only subscription revenue to rise 14% to 17% and digital advertising revenue to grow in the high teens, while first-quarter sales and marketing costs were already up 17.1%.
But the trade can weaken at both ends. Search changes or AI-generated summaries could answer a puzzle query without sending a reader to CNET, Yahoo or TechRadar; the Times itself warns that search, social-media and AI companies can draw audiences and advertisers away. A sharper downside would pair falling outside page views with weaker free-to-paid conversion at the Times, leaving both sides with daily production costs and fewer visits they can monetize.
That is the asymmetry for investors. Outside publishers can manufacture low-cost inventory from a puzzle they do not own. The Times gets the player, the bundle pitch and the chance to turn a few minutes of daily play into years of recurring revenue.