Wordle Hint June 8: NYT Connections No. 1093 — Hints and Answers

Wordle Hint June 8: Check the hints and full answers for NYT Connections puzzle No. 1093, including landforms by water, slang-for-head and movie-title groups.

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Samantha Cole
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Technology reporter specialising in consumer electronics, social media policy, and digital privacy. Regular panelist at CES and SXSW.
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Wordle Hint June 8: NYT Connections No. 1093 — Hints and Answers

A hints-and-answers post for the June 8, 2026 puzzle No. 1,093 published the day’s four category groups and every solution for players checking their results; if you searched for a wordle hint june 8, the categories and completed answers are below. Puzzle No. 1093 offered mixed difficulty across its four groups, and the post included two short clues presented as the green and blue-group hints.

The four theme groups were clear and compact: landforms by water; slang for head; things that can be spiked; and titles that complete the phrase "The ____ Man". The landforms-by-water answers were delta, island, isthmus and peninsula. The slang-for-head set contained coconut, dome, melon and pate. Things that can be spiked read mohawk, punch, sea urchin and volleyball. The movie-title group returned elephant, invisible, omega and running.

Two brief hints appeared alongside the solution grid: the green-group clue read "It sits on your shoulders," and the blue-group hint instructed solvers to "Think of a large, heavy nail used in building a railroad track." The published answers did not attach those two color hints to any single list in the post; readers could match them to the groups at a glance or use them as minor nudges when replaying the puzzle mentally.

Beyond the answers themselves, the post referenced tools and tracking features available to players. It noted a Connections Bot similar to the one used for Wordle for those who want automated assistance after attempting the puzzle. It also reminded registrants that the Games section keeps personal statistics — number of puzzles completed, win rate, perfect scores and win streaks — so regular solvers can monitor how well they fare over time even when they consult solutions.

One awkward detail in the write-up is also its selling point: the puzzle was described as a real challenge even while the post provided the completed answers. That mismatch is familiar to daily players — the same post that supplies instant gratification also undercuts the test of skill that made the game addictive. For some readers, the completed lists are a practical check; for others, seeing full solutions erases the satisfaction of working a tough group out on their own.

The practical value of the published answers is straightforward: they let players verify whether their groupings and placements were correct, including the four answers in each category. But the post did not and could not reveal how many players reached those groupings unaided. There is no public aggregate solve-rate attached to the June 8 release; registered players can see only their personal completion counts and streaks through the Times Games section, not a platform-wide total of unassisted solves.

If you skipped attempting the puzzle and came straight for a wordle hint june 8, the lists above give everything you need to mark your card for No. 1093. If you played and then checked the answers, you join the unresolved figure the community will never quite know: how many players solved puzzle No. 1093 without leaning on hints or the Bot? That unanswered tally is the single measurable gap left by the published solutions — and the piece of data most likely to shape how competitive solvers treat future answer posts.

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Editor

Technology reporter specialising in consumer electronics, social media policy, and digital privacy. Regular panelist at CES and SXSW.