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NYT Strands Answers May 24 2026 Revealed for Puzzle No. 812 Theme Summer Essentials

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Powerball tickets rest on a 7-Eleven store register January 9, 2016 in Chicago, Illinois.

NEW YORK — The New York Times Strands puzzle for May 24, 2026, numbered 812, had the theme “Summer Essentials” with the spangram BEACHBAG, according to official solutions published by the newspaper and multiple review sites.

The six theme words were SUNSCREEN, TOWEL, FLIPFLOPS, SUNGLASSES, COOLER and UMBRELLA. These items represent common gear used for beach days, pool outings and outdoor summer activities.

The spangram BEACHBAG describes a large carry-all bag used to transport summer supplies. It typically spans the grid from one side to the other and was highlighted in yellow upon discovery.

Puzzle Details

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Strands presents a 6×8 grid of letters where players connect adjacent letters horizontally, vertically or diagonally to form words. The game includes one spangram that captures the overarching theme and several additional theme words. Non-theme words can be submitted for hints after finding three.

Many solvers identified BEACHBAG early, which unlocked the remaining summer-related items. SUNSCREEN and TOWEL were frequently found first. FLIPFLOPS, SUNGLASSES, COOLER and UMBRELLA completed the theme set.

The puzzle reset at midnight local time. Players who submitted non-theme words received progressive hints, including the first three letters of remaining words.

Previous Day Comparison

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The May 23, 2026, puzzle No. 811 featured the theme “Staying alive” with the spangram SURVIVALIST and words MACHETE, HATCHET, FLINT, PARACORD, TARP and SHOVEL.

Game Mechanics

Strands is part of The New York Times Games portfolio alongside Wordle, Connections and others. Players must use each letter exactly once across all valid words. The spangram is highlighted in yellow upon discovery, while theme words appear in blue. A perfect solve shows a specific pattern of indicators.

The May 24 edition fell on a Sunday. Community feedback noted the seasonal theme was timely as summer approached in the Northern Hemisphere. The words focused on practical outdoor and leisure items.

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Strategies Reported by Solvers

Common approaches included scanning for longer words or obvious compounds like BEACHBAG. Many began in corners or looked for summer-related terms after recognizing the theme. Finding the spangram first often simplified the remaining grid.

The New York Times publishes a Sidekick companion with hints. For puzzle 812, it encouraged thinking about items typically packed for a day at the beach or pool.

Popularity and Context

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Strands has maintained steady engagement since its expansion in the NYT Games lineup. The daily format encourages vocabulary, pattern recognition and lateral thinking. Sunday puzzles sometimes incorporate seasonal themes like the May 24 edition.

On May 24, 2026, the puzzle aligned with other NYT games: Wordle answer STORM and Connections categories including types of bags, famous duos, things that spin and words that can follow “black.”

Broader NYT Games Ecosystem

The New York Times offers Strands through its website and mobile app. Basic daily play is free, with subscriptions providing archives and additional features. The game requires finding all theme words and the spangram to complete the board fully.

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No major rule changes were reported for Strands in 2026. The format continues to blend word search and crossword elements, with the spangram providing the thematic anchor. Difficulty varies by grid arrangement and word familiarity.

Community Engagement

Solvers shared results on social platforms using indicator grids that avoid full spoilers. Discussions highlighted the practical vocabulary in the May 24 puzzle. Some noted connections to real-world summer activities and vacation preparation.

Performance tracking includes solve times, hint usage and perfect completion rates. The purple-level challenge in related games like Connections often draws comparisons to Strands’ spangram difficulty.

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Historical Notes

Strands builds on the success of other NYT word games launched or acquired in recent years. Puzzle numbering reached the 800s by mid-2026, reflecting consistent daily output. Each edition adds to an archive of thematic challenges.

The May 24 solution emphasized single-word items with specific functions in outdoor and leisure contexts. Official answers are confirmed directly from The New York Times sources after the daily reset.

Players who missed the May 24 puzzle can reference solution archives. The game continues to attract participants seeking a balance of accessibility and intellectual challenge through its letter grid format.

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Cyient shares crash 6% as stock turns ex-record date for Rs 720 crore share buyback. What’s ahead?

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Shares of Cyient crashed nearly 6% on Wednesday after the stock turned ex-record date for its share buyback worth Rs 720 crore at a price of Rs 1,125 per share, implying a premium of around 24% over the previous closing price.

The engineering and technology services company had fixed June 17 (Wednesday) as the record date for its Rs 720 crore share buyback. Only those shareholders who own the company’s shares in their demat accounts as of today will be eligible to tender shares. This means that any investor taking fresh positions in the counter will likely get the shares credited tomorrow as per Sebi’s T+1 settlement rule, making them ineligible to participate in the buyback.

All about Cyient’s share buyback

Cyient in April said it will buy back up to 64 lakh shares for Rs 1,125 per share. This marks Cyient’s first buyback since 2019. In an exchange filing released on Monday, Cyient announced that its shareholders have now approved the share buyback. The entitlement ratio and other details will be announced later.

Buyback of shares refers to a corporate action where a company repurchases its own shares from existing shareholders. Usually, the company purchases the shares at a higher price than current levels, encouraging investors to participate. Typically, a company decides to buy back its shares to increase share value, utilise surplus cash, prevent hostile takeovers or increase promoter holdings.

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Sensex rises over 250 points, Nifty above 24,000 as Dalal Street extends gains for 4th session. What lies ahead?

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Cyient share price

Cyient shares have gained over 1% in one week but is down nearly 23% in 2026 so far. In the longer term, the shares of the company have fallen 36% in one year and 42% in three years, but recorded marginal gains in five years.The company currently has a market capitalisation of less than Rs 9,540 crore.

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Why does Emkay maintain a ‘Reduce’ call on Cyient shares?

Emkay maintained its ‘Reduce’ call on Cyient shares, while increasing its target price to Rs 900 apiece from Rs 850 apiece. The latest target price implies a downside potential of less than 1% from the stock’s previous closing price of Rs 907.65 apiece.
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(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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PwC moves to new Welsh headquarters building

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The professional advisory firm has moved its Cardiff operation into the One Central Square office building

One Central Square.(Image: Western Mail)

Professional advisory firm PwC has moved into its new Welsh headquarters in the centre of Cardiff.

The firm, which since the pandemic has seen its head count in the capital double to 400, has relocated to the One Central Square building at the wider Central Square office, residential and retail scheme around Cardiff Central Station.

The firm has taken two floors, which have been refurbished using Welsh suppliers, extending to 33,500 sq ft. It has moved from its previous Cardiff city centre offices at the 2 Kingsway building, where it was located for 25 years.

Its new office space was previous occupied by car finance company Motonovo before it relocated to the adjacent 2 Central Square office building.

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The firm considered a number of new locations, and at one stage were linked to a new build development at the nearby Central Quay regeneration project at the former Brains brewery site, before opting for One Central Square.

The building’s close proximity to good public transport links, with Cardiff Central Station and the new bus station, were supporting factors in the decision The office provides the firm’s service lines of consulting, tax, audit and deals, as well as housing its specialist ethical hacking team for the UK.

PwC partner Stuart Couch

Stuart Couch, market leader for PwC in Wales, said: “It’s a real pleasure to finally open the doors of our new offices here at One Central Square, a building that reflects PwC’s ambitions in Wales, just as the Central Square development reflects Cardiff’s ambitions.

“There are real reasons to be optimistic about Wales’ prospects. It has proven its strength in advanced manufacturing, its fintech and insurance sectors are growing fast, and it is starting to take advantage of its natural edge in the transition to green energy.

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” Capitalising on those strengths will require leaders to make creative decisions – new approaches to financing, complex transformation programmes, cross-sector collaboration. One Central Square gives us the platform to play our part in unlocking Wales’ potential and helping it take the next steps in its economic journey.”

PwC’s new Cardiff office.

Pontypool-born Mr Couch said its new office has been designed to accommodate further growth in head count. PwC was the first professional advisory firm requiring staff to be in the office, or with clients, for at least three days a week after the pandemic.

Carl Sizer, chief markets officer at PwC, UK, said: “We’ve been in Cardiff for over 90 years, and our move to One Central Square underlines our continued investment and focus on the Welsh market.

“Our regional strategy is fundamental to our purpose and our success; it’s vital that we live and work where our clients do, so that we can better understand their issues and work closely alongside them.”

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One Central Square, which extends to 136,000 sq ft, is asset managed by property advisory firm Knight Frank, who, through its Cardiff office, are also the letting agents.

After the decision of Motonovo to surrender its lease on 70,000 sq ft of space in the building, which is owned by Middle Eastern investors, One Central Square is now fully let again following a number of recent letting deals. As well as PwC, they include NatWest – which is taking a floor that was occupied by law firm Blake Morgan who will remain in the building – and fellow law firm Knights. Both are fitting out their respective new offices ahead of moving in. Other new tenants to recently move into the building include law firms Browne Jacobson and Lewis Silkin.

Head of the Cardiff office of Knight Frank, Matthew Phillips, said: “The letting success at One Central Square clearly demonstrates pent up demand for best in class city centre office buildings in Cardiff served by good amenities and close proximity to public transport links.”

The terms of the letting with PwC have not been disclosed.

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