Daily Group Grid Answer — July 14, 2026
Full answer to our original Daily Group Grid puzzle for July 14, 2026 (Puzzle #195). Want the latest day instead? Head to today's answer, or just need a nudge — try the progressive hints. Tap a blacked-out box to reveal it.
Hints (no spoilers)
- Yellow: the easiest, most literal group.
- Green: a small twist on the obvious.
- Blue: trickier — think category, not surface meaning.
- Purple: the curveball; expect wordplay or a hidden pattern.
The Answers
| Group | Theme | Words |
|---|---|---|
| 🟡 Yellow | Continents | AFRICA, ASIA, EUROPE, OCEANIA |
| 🟢 Green | James Bond actors | CRAIG, MOORE, DALTON, BROSNAN |
| 🔵 Blue | Pool / billiards | CUE, RACK, POCKET, CHALK |
| 🟣 Purple | Pastries | ECLAIR, DANISH, STRUDEL, CRULLER |
The purple trap: DANISH could be a nationality but here it's the pastry; MOORE reads like a place but it's a Bond actor.
How the July 14, 2026 board comes apart
Start with Continents (🟡 yellow). AFRICA, ASIA, EUROPE and OCEANIA share the most literal link on the board — each one is a plain, dictionary-level example of “Continents”. Bank the safest group first: clearing four tiles early leaves every later decoy fewer places to hide.
Green is James Bond actors (🟢). CRAIG and MOORE usually surface first; the test is whether DALTON and BROSNAN belong to “James Bond actors” just as cleanly. If one of the four feels forced, that word probably serves another group and you are one tile off.
The blue group, Pool / billiards, tends to need a second pass. CUE, RACK, POCKET and CHALK only click once you stop reading each word at surface level and ask what single category could hold all four at once — here, that shared frame is “Pool / billiards”.
Purple is Pastries: ECLAIR, DANISH, STRUDEL and CRULLER. Do not hunt for it directly — the “Pastries” link is built to stay invisible until the easier groups are gone. Solve around it and let the last four tiles confirm themselves.
Why the purple group misleads: DANISH could be a nationality but here it's the pastry; MOORE reads like a place but it's a Bond actor. Whenever a word seems to fit two groups, park it and finish the group that has four unambiguous members — the leftover placement resolves itself.
Want to play instead?
Play today's Daily Group Grid, see today's hints, or browse the full answer archive. New to grouping puzzles? Our word-grouping tips and puzzle glossary cover the recurring category types.
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