Strand’s NYT Hints, Spangram and Answer for Today, 18 January 2025


If you’re looking for Strands for Saturday 18 January 2025 hints and answers, read on – I’ll share some hints and tips and finally the solution to the puzzle themed “O ___! My ___!”

For an easy way to return to our Strands tips every day, bookmark this page. You can also find our previous hints there if you want to know what you missed in a previous puzzle.

Below I’ll give you some oblique hints for today’s Strands answer. And further down the page I reveal the framework and the answers. Scroll slowly and pick up just the hints you need!

NEW Strand's board of directors for 18 January 2025: O ___! My ___!


Credit: Strands/NYT


Hint for the span frame in today’s Strands puzzle

The word that goes in the blanks in the puzzle theme. It is the title of a Walt Whitman poem.


Hint for the theme words in today’s Strands puzzle

Famous pop culture characters with the title from the spangram.

BEWARE: Spoilers ahead for today’s Strands puzzle!

We are about to give away the answers to today’s Strands puzzle.

What is the spanframe in today’s Strands?

Today’s spangram is CAPTAIN.

What are the key words in today’s Strands?

The theme words today are: CRUNCH, KANGAROO, PLANET, HOOK, UNDERPANTS, OBVIOUS.

This is what the board looks like when the puzzle is solved:

Completed NYT Strand's board of directors for January 18, 2024: O ___! My ___!


Credit: Strands/NYT

How I solved today’s Strands

The phrase that comes to mind when you read the theme is “O Captain! My Captain!” which is the name of a poem by Walt Whitman. That doesn’t help me much though – are we looking for other poem titles? Or, because “Captain” is out of the question, maybe we’re looking for synonyms for that word?

TOOK, TORAH, VAIN, BONK, RANGE, ORANGE, ANKH and STAIN are non-theme words. Oh, but CRUNCH is! Must be a reference to the cereal mascot Cap’n Crunch, which means we’re looking for the names of famous captains.

And there’s CAPTAIN across the middle, the spanframe.

HOOK is above the right side of the span frame.

PLANET cuts across the top of the puzzle from right to left.

KANGAROO completing the top half.

Hmm, not sure about this bottom half yet. I don’t see “Nemo”, “America” ​​or anything else I recognize.

Ah, UNDERPANTS!

Finally, and somewhat ironically, ENLIGHTENING.

Strands #321
“O ___! My ___!”

How to play Strands

You can find the Strands game on the New York Times website and in the NYT Games app.

When you start playing, you’ll see a game board with a selection of letters, flanked by a clue that hints at the board’s theme – this will be a phrase like “Better with age.” Your task is to find the hidden words on the board that reflect the theme of the puzzle.

A crossword crossed with a word search

The most important word to find is “spangram”, a word that more explicitly states the theme of the puzzle. (For example, the spanframe for the “Better with Age” themed puzzle is FERMENTED, which describes products that, you guessed it, get better with age.) The spanframe will span the entire game board, either left to right or top to bottom (hence the name). When you find the span frame, it will be highlighted in yellow. Solving the spanframe usually makes the rest of the puzzle much easier to complete.

In Strands, words can travel in any direction (up, down, left, right, and diagonal), and you’ll only use each letter once. There is only one correct solution. When you correctly identify one of the puzzle words (for example, KOMBUCHA, MISO or KIMCHI), it will be highlighted in blue.

If you’re struggling to solve the puzzle, you can submit any non-theme word you see (as long as they’re four letters or more) to receive credit for a single hint. If you submit three words without a theme, the “Hint” button will be clickable; if you click on it, all the letters of one of the theme words will be highlighted for you. You still need to link these highlighted letters in the correct order to form one of the theme words. If there is already a hint on the board and you use another hint before solving that word, the letter order of that word will be revealed.

How to win Strands

Unlike Connections and Wordle, you can’t go wrong with Strands. When you submit guesses, you will either correctly identify an answer, receive credit toward a hint, or the text will jiggle back and forth, indicating that the word you submitted is too short or invalid. You cannot run out of guesses and there is no time limit.

You win when you have used all the letters on the board correctly, which means you have identified the spanframe and all the theme words. Like other NYT games, when you solve the puzzle you’ll see a sharable card indicating how you did that day: blue dots indicate theme words you found, the yellow dot indicates when you found the spanframe, and a light bulb indicates words for which you have been given a hint.